I sat on a blanket beside my friend on a warm summer morning as we
watched our children participate in a soccer camp. We were reflecting on
motherhood and how it had changed us over the long, but short, years
that we had been mothers. My tenure as a mother is just shy of a decade,
so really, not that long.
I explained to her how I had been reading the Institutes of
St. John Cassian as part of my research for a (very, very) long term
project, and that I have found his instructions to monks about growth in
virtue very applicable to my life as a laywoman. Not that I am called
to the austerity that the desert fathers lived, but that the austerity
that they are called to is parallel to that which a mother and wife is
called.
I brought him up to my friend, because, Cassian, when talking about
covetousness made a point that rang so true to my experience of seeking
to grow in holiness in my vocation: “[T]here is no one who has not
something to give up.” (Book VI, Ch. 27)...
Read the rest at the National Catholic Register...
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