Chapter 5 of the Rule of Benedict concerns The Tools for Good Works. Chittister’s translation and reflection are especially relevant as we serve in Guatemala.
Your way of acting should be different form the world’s way; the love of
Christ must come before all else. You are not to act in anger or nurse a grudge.
Rid your heart of all deceit. Never give a hallow greeting of peace or turn away
when someone needs your love. Bind yourself to no oath lest it prove false, but
speak the truth with heart and tongue.
The end of Benedictine spirituality is to develop a transparent personality. Dissimulation, half answers, vindictive attitudes, a false presentation of self are all barbs in the soul of the monastic. Holiness, this ancient rule says to a culture that has made crafty packaging a high art, has something to do with being who we say we are, claiming our truths, opening our hearts, giving ourselves to the other pure
and unglossed . . . Benedict is intent on developing people who are what they
seem to be.
As you work today, think about when you are most real. Are those the moments where you are most holy? When and where are you able to be most authentically you? Here?