"If we wish to dwell in the tent of this kingdom, we will never arrive unless we run there by doing good deeds." The Rule of St. Benedict, Prologue, vs.22
Sunday, May 20, 2007
"The Art of Minimums" - Wendell Berry
As Thoreau so well knew, and so painstakingly tried to show us, what a man most needs is not a knowledge of how to get more, but a knowledge of the most he can do without, and of how to get along without it. The essential cultural discrimination is not between having and not having or have and have-nots, but between the superfluous and the indispensable. Wisdom, it seems to me, is always poised upon the knowledge of minimums; it might be thought to be the art of minimums. Granting the frailty, and no doubt the impermanence, of modern technology as a human contrivance, the man who can keep a fire in a stove or on a hearth is not only more durable, but wiser, closer to the meaning of fire, than the man who can only work a thermostat.
I am a monk of the Order of the Holy Cross and live at Holy Cross Monastery in West Park, New York. The Order consists of five monasteries in the U.S., Canada, and South Africa in the Anglican/Episcopal tradition.
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