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I remember the first time I met Thomas Berry. It was
about twenty years ago in January in Chicago at Mundelein
College where I had begun our Institute in Culture and
Creation Spirituality a few years earlier. Scientist
Brian Swimme had moved out with his family that fall to teach
with us and he insisted that we invite Thomas Berry from New
York to speak to the students. After his challenging
presentation, we were walking to dinner through the wet slush
of a Chicago January and I told Tom that I was working on a
book on Hildegard of Bingen's paintings and illuminations.
"Ah, Hildegard!" he said. "A great
genius." And he was off expounding on Hildegard.
He was the first person I had encountered who knew who she
was. And of course his knowledge was of the
deepest kind.
Thomas Berry helps me to resacralize the gift of curiosity.
So many people in our culture and so many clergy appear to be
anything but curious. They are complacent.
Intellectually complacent. But not Tom. Perhaps
the greatest tribute I can make to Thomas Berry is to point
out how profoundly his work parallels that of his namesake,
whom he quotes often, Saint Thomas Aquinas. Aquinas,
living in the thirteenth century, was witnessing a breakdown
of forms in religion, politics, and economics not wholly
unlike our century. His response was like Thomas
Berry's: Go to science, rediscover the ways of the Universe.
"All creatures love one another," he would observe.
While Aquinas had only one scientist to go to, Aristotle,
nevertheless he spent his life bringing Aristotle's scientific
worldview into culture and into Christian thought.
Aquinas was an intellectual who was both mystic and prophet;
his ideas had social consequences that made him and his work
deeply controversial in his time. (Indeed, he was
canonized a saint by the same church that condemned him three
times first!)
Thomas Berry has studied contemporary science with depth and
abandon, mind and heart. He has also immersed himself in
the ancient wisdom of indigenous peoples and the wisdom of
China and the East. Yet he has always stayed true to the
path of critical thought and of prophetic consciousness.
He speaks with the poetry of his Celtic ancestors, and his
scholarship (as distinct from academic ego inflation) is both
critical and caring.
Above all, his love of the cosmos and his insistence that all
education and all professions are ultimately responsible to
the cosmos is his deepest legacy. By calling us to an
enduring creation story from the new science he gives us tools
for beginning over. He not only deconstructs; he
reconstructs. So many priests of his generation are
cynical and so many academicians are only committed to
deconstructing. What Thomas Berry has that these people
lack is a sense of wonder that has not diminished with age.
There is a youthfulness in Thomas Berry that is evident in the
radical questions he asks as well as in the wonder he elicits.
He helps us dream the Earth anew, dream our work anew, dream
religion and education anew.
I
find in Thomas Berry and his passion for eco-justice and
cosmic storytelling a true descendant (might we say
reincarnation?) of the Celtic spiritual genius. His love
of the Earth, his sense of humor, his gift of language, his
poetic consciousness, his moral outrage, his primal
appreciation of the aesthetic, his common sense, and his
prophetic storytelling all point to the interconnectivity of
nature and human nature, the sacred and daily life, the divine
and the human and the more-than-human that characterize the
Celtic spirit at its best. His encouragement of other
thinkers is also a gift that he gives to us.
Thomas Berry is a true elder. He has been true to his catholic
heritage in the deepest sense of finding and naming, with
Teilhard de Chardin's help, the sacramental character of the
Universe. And, in the tradition of Aquinas, he has
"shared the fruits of his contemplation" by his
writing, his teaching, and lecturing, and by his witness as an
elder gifting other generations with the most precious gift of
all: the blessing of creation. Some day, it may even
happen that his religious order and his church will recognize
his spiritual depth. But there is no need to waste time
waiting for that. Rather, our gratitude to Tom ought to
be expressed in getting on with our living and our citizenship
whereby we integrate Tom's values -- which are the ecological
values the world needs today -- into our workworlds and
worship worlds, our psychic, cosmic, and planetary worlds.
I
myself have tried to do this by bringing Universe back to
university as we try to do at the University of Creation
Spirituality and Naropa Institute in Oakland and by bringing
ritual alive again through Techno Cosmic Masses at our Howard
Thurman Ritual Center. Judging by the response to both
enterprises and from the talent and excitement they attract, I
know Thomas Berry has laid out a correct agenda for our time.
There lies this man's tribute to a master teacher,
"Meister Thomas Berry." |