Word: grahame
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Ever since the publication four years ago of his bestselling autobiography, The Seven Storey Mountain, Trappist Thomas Merton (Father Louis) has been testifying to the virtues of the strict monastic life.* At least one of his fellow monks thinks that Merton makes too broad a case. Dom Aelred Graham, 46, a British theologian and an author himself (his latest book: Catholicism and the World Today), is now prior of St. Gregory's Priory in Portsmouth, R.I. He belongs to the Benedictines, an order older than the Trappists and far less stern in its practices. Writing for the Atlantic Monthly...
...Thomas Merton," as Father Graham sees him, "belongs to the class of writers-intense, one-sided, humorless, propagandist, morally indignant-whose work falls outside the normal canons of criticism . . . Having conceived for himself a sublime ideal, he has heroically given it effect . . . There can be no withholding tribute to the earnestness of his convictions...
After thus giving Merton an A for effort, Benedictine Graham goes on to scan Merton's message to readers. He admits the deep appeal of this message-"at a time when men are perplexed with fear and disillusionment, the call of the ascetic to world-renunciation can go to the head like wine." But how deep does the message go, and how true is it? Asks Graham: Is Thomas Merton "an exponent of Christian holiness?-or a preacher of pseudo-perfectionism...
Mysticism for the Masses. To begin with, Benedictine Graham finds Merton's approach to mysticism, i.e., "the highest form of union with God to which man can attain on earth," at once too rigid and too loose. It is too rigid because Merton implies that the monastic, ascetic life is the only way to sainthood. It is too loose because he implies that the monastic ideal can be realized by almost anybody. "Merton ... is in fact a propagandist of mysticism for the masses...
Mystics, absorbed in the effort to contemplate God, tend to scorn the physical world around them. Graham concedes that Merton, despite his bent toward mysticism, recognizes the basic Roman Catholic philosophy that "human nature must somehow be essentially good." He doubts, however, that Merton has put this idea clearly across to his readers. His message, stated mostly in terms of his personal experience, is not sufficiently qualified in the light of Catholic doctrine, Graham objects. "He may well already be the saint of his aspirations; theologically, I am afraid, he is still a young man in a hurry...