Saint Andrew’s Church
Lake Worth, Florida

Commemoration of St. Aelred (January 12, 2002)
Canon Richard T. Nolan

Friendship and St. Aelred

         In the 1960s and 70s virtually all human relationships and behaviors were subjected to random experimentation. That age challenged almost all that we assumed to be good. We moved from an era of fate (when everything important seemed to be unchangeable) to an era of choice (when most everything significant seemed to be questioned, discarded or recast). A smorgasbord of moral options emerged: some superficial, others well informed. We were again asking, “How should we behave?" “What’s the right thing to do?”

         We discovered that the recitation of carefully chosen Bible verses no longer had persuasive moral power. Dietary laws and executing one’s misbehaving son had long been set aside along with the regard of women as property. Also, we listened sometimes impatiently to Jesus’ hard sayings (such as, "If your right eye causes you to sin, tear it out..."). As precepts for daily personal living, such counsel seemed neither convincing nor attainable.

         However, to perceive Jesus’ hard sayings as rules for daily behavior is to miss the point; his profound contributions are elsewhere. For example, everything he teaches in the realm of morality is designed to integrate outward behavior with inner disposition. From him we learn that it is insufficient just to conform outwardly to virtuous commands. Just "going through the motions," merely "going by the book," is deficient; it lacks heart. Instead, good actions must be bound up with appropriate motives, intentions, and loyalties. In this sense, Jesus' teachings are radical. They get to the root of the matter: a genuine orientation of the whole person toward God and the resulting harmony of heart, mind, and will are expected. By implication, they bring into play the necessity of God's grace for any of us to walk his demanding path.

         Jesus is not a philosopher designing an ethical system applicable to everyone everywhere under all prevailing societal conditions. Even in the Sermon on the Mount, he is not offering a seminar on applied ethics. In fact, neither he nor the Bible directly address most of the unique problems arising from societal and scientific developments of the current age. However, in Mark’s Gospel read moments ago he provides us with a context for discerning moral options, a version of the Summary of the Law. "Hear, O Israel: the Lord our God, the Lord is one; you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind. …. You shall love your neighbor as yourself." By Jesus' own words "There is no other commandment greater than these.” Or, as Matthew puts it: “On these two commandments hang all the Law and the Prophets." This Summary is the only absolute commandment upon which all else depends during our journey toward the fullness and perfection of the Kingdom of God. All of Jesus’ moral counsel flows from the Summary to particular circumstances. From him we learn that each of us is under an obligation to promote the interests of the others with whom we come in contact, whether at home or at work. Mutual love, unselfishness, humility, equal regard, and generosity of spirit, all accompanied by God's grace, are emphasized in all human associations. One might say that the Christian life is the loving concern for the wellbeing of persons under the inspiration of and devotion to Jesus and the ideals he personifies.

         St. Aelred, patron Saint of Integrity since 1987, was born in 1109 at Durham, and was sent to the Scottish court for an education that would ensure his future as a noble and courtier. He found success at the court of an earthly king unsatisfying, and at the age of 24 he entered a monastery in Yorkshire. His first work The Mirror of Charity deals with seeking to follow the example of Christ in all things. He eventually became the monastery’s abbot, a post which he held until his death twenty years later at the age of 57.

          His most famous work is called Spiritual Friendship which contradicted the typical monastic rule that a monk should form no preferences or attachments, even individual friendships with fellow monks. In many monasteries, where the monks or nuns walk two by two into chapel or the dining hall or while pacing about during the daily hour of recreation, the Superior would make a point of constantly shifting partners, lest anyone form a liking for one person more than another. This prohibition not only applied to friends, but also to preferences in food. Against this view, Aelred wrote that it is compatible with the highest degree of Christian perfection to take special pleasure in the company of particular friends. He pointed out that Jesus loved John, and Mary, and Martha, and Lazarus, and that this probably means that he found their company particularly congenial. In his Mirror of Love Aelred wrote:

"It is in fact a great consolation in this life to have someone to whom you can unite in the intimate embrace of the most sacred love, in whom your spirit can rest, to whom you can pour out your soul, in whose delightful company, as in a sweet soothing song, you can take comfort in the midst of sorrow, in whose friendly bosom you can find peace in worldly setbacks; to whose loving heart you can open as freely as you would to yourself your innermost thoughts; through whose spiritual kisses, -- as by some medicine --, you may draw out all the weariness of your restless anxieties. ….

"And lest this sort of sacred love should seem improper to anyone, Jesus himself, in everything like us, patient and compassionate with us in every matter, transfigured it through the expression of his own love: for he allowed one, not all , to recline on his breast as a sign of his special love, so that the head of one was supported in the flowers of the virgin breast of the other; and the closer they were, the more copiously did the fragrant secrets of the heavenly marriage impart the sweet smell of spiritual chrism to their virgin love."

         Throughout the years friendship has been problematic in many cultures. Even today we tend to raise an eyebrow when we see two people of the opposite or same sex sharing an emotionally intimate relationship. Some assume that if the friendship is that deep, sexual expression is inevitable. Aelred, preaching the Gospel of Christ’s love, sanctifies the deepest of friendships without the inevitability of sexual expression. And that is what Integrity, indeed all Christian friendship, encourages – not a negation of all sexual activity, but the promotion of a variety of genuine friendships among all people, male and female of all sexual orientations. To be sure, some friendships may develop into a covenanted bond, a marital union, but this is certainly not essential to all authentic friendships.

         May I add parenthetically here that our final hymn today “I sing a song of the saints of God” was selected in honor of St. Aelred and of you and me. A touch of humor will be found by some, and that’s fine. Our Lord will smile with us!

          My fellow worshippers, the ethical dimension of life is not an exact science. Furthermore, we cannot access God's Mind for divine solutions through the Internet. Rather, morality is an art. In his demanding Summary of the Law Christ has provided us with the colors, the brush, and the canvas. In doing the right thing, painting the right picture, we may have more options than we imagine. However, as we engage in moral explorations and propose workable solutions, inspired by Saints such as Aelred, we should not become overconfident that we have ever reached the last word. I suspect that in all matters Jesus would offer challenges that would jolt us, humble us, guide us, and grace us to keep the pilgrimage advancing, during this, our journey toward the Kingdom of God.