Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Gregory the Great on Pastoral Care

Today, I read in Celebrating the Seasons a selection from Gregory the Great's "Pastoral Care." It actually comes from chapter seven of Book One, "Of the Life of a Pastor." Celebrating the Seasons does a great job of using more modern vernacular. But I think that the way the Early Church Fathers series writes them is still understandable.

Here in this reading, I find it interesting, that even in life "back then" pastors could get caught up in things that pull us away from what we need to be doing. Read this below and tell me what you think. Does this exhortation need to be heard by more of us today? If you need a more modern reading, go to Google Books and do a search for Celebrating the Seasons and go to page 332.

The ruler should not relax his care for the things that are within in his occupation among the things that are without, nor neglect to provide for the things that are without in his solicitude for the things that are within; lest either, given up to the things that are without, he fall away from his inmost concerns, or, occupied only with the things that are within bestow not on his neighbours outside himself what he owes them. For it is often the case that some, as if forgetting that they have been put over their brethren for their souls’ sake, devote themselves with the whole effort of their heart to secular concerns; these, when they are at hand, they exult in transacting, and, even when there is a lack of them, pant after them night and day with seethings of turbid thought; and when, haply for lack of opportunity, they have quiet from them, by their very quiet they are wearied all the more. For they count it pleasure to be tired by action: they esteem it labour not to labour in earthly businesses. And so it comes to pass that, while they delight in being hustled by worldly tumults, they are ignorant of the things that are within, which they ought to have taught to others. And from this cause undoubtedly, the life also of their subjects is benumbed; because, while desirous of advancing spiritually, it meets a stumbling-block on the way in the example of him who is set over it. For when the head languishes, the members fail to thrive; and it is in vain for an army to follow swiftly in pursuit of enemies if the very leader of the march goes wrong. No exhortation sustains the minds of the subjects, and no reproof chastises their faults, because, while the office of an earthly judge is executed by the guardian of souls, the attention of the shepherd is diverted from custody of the flock; and the subjects are unable to apprehend the light of truth, because, while earthly pursuits occupy the pastor’s mind, dust, driven by the wind of temptation, blinds the Church’s eyes.

No comments: