You might think that religious communities never change,
from decade to decade – and even century to century – and that perhaps that’s
their point. But they do, and last year I missed out on my annual retreat to
Malling Abbey because the holy Sisters were reorganising the guest
accommodation, and in fact I was too woefully disorganised to get in anywhere
else either. It was a relief to be back this year for a couple of days.
The guests now inhabit four nice new rooms over the Abbey
cloister, looking out onto the Cloister Garth with its fountain and church bell
tower behind. The old Guesthouse, which comprised many more rooms, had a
certain spatchcock charm, but I won’t miss scuttling along the hallway in my
pyjamas wondering who I might meet on my way to the shower, and not being able
to move around the room without the floor creaking so much one risked waking
the resident next door. It used to be pleasant to have meals cooked for us, but
I don’t resent the Sisters deciding that aspect of Benedictine hospitality is a
bit beyond them now, and self-catering just requires a little organisation.
Frankly I never went to Malling for the food, it has to be said; although a few
years ago on the Feast of St Benedict we were treated to rather a nice banoffee
pie.
The old Guesthouse is now occupied by the St Benedict’s
Centre, a theological and spiritual resource for St Augustine’s College,
Canterbury, with a new library on the opposite side of the path. There’s a big
car park beyond what was a tall hedge, and a path between the two along which
people come and go, making the site feel less isolated than it once did. The
Pilgrim Chapel’s quaint rush-seated chairs have been replaced by upholstered
red ones, aesthetically horrendous but far more comfortable. There are
entry-code doors and PIR-operated lights so you run less risk of serious injury
moving around the Abbey at night (of course once upon a time it was assumed you
wouldn’t be moving around at night)
and so you no longer have to ask the Guest Sister for permission to be outside
the enclosure after Compline. Change has come to perpetual Malling; and
although as outsiders none of us knows quite what conversations the community
went through before they opened themselves up in this way, it must have taken
quite some mental restructuring, some reassessment of what ‘Benedictine
hospitality’ actually meant.
My time there was good. I arrived in rain, spent Tuesday in
lovely sunshine, and left in rain again: seeing the Abbey in its different
meteorological moods gives some sense of what living there is like. I managed
to pray about things I need to amend in my life, aspects of the life of
Swanvale Halt church, and the centrality of the Blessed Sacrament as I sat in
the Pilgrim Chapel with the rain beating on the windows. I got through Michael
Ramsey’s The Gospel and the Catholic
Church, which reminded me why I read it first ten years ago, and Rowan
Williams’s Silence and Honey Cakes
about the spirituality of the Desert Fathers. I’ve read that before, too, but
it hit home far deeper this time. The book is more than it first appears: far
from being just an examination of a time in the past life of the Church, it’s a
politely and covertly stated manifesto for what the Church should be now:
certainly not adopting too much the models of the manager and theologies of
leadership (as though Jesus ever talked of any such thing!), but based rather
on the words of St Antony the Great: ‘Our life and death is with our neighbour.
If we win our brother we win God. If we cause our brother to stumble we have
sinned against Christ.’ Of course he takes a book, albeit not a long one, to
open that statement out. I realised afresh how superficial and silly my
spiritual life can be and the nonsense that sometimes characterises my
thinking. I think I have a new glimpse of the reason why there are priests, and
why parish priests are in so perilous a spiritual position. I walked to St
Leonard’s Well and found it dry as it sometimes is (it was in full flow in
2015).
And I was very grateful for it all, for the rain and for the
sun and for these old stones and for Benedictine hospitality, whatever it means
in the 21st century.
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