The city is the boast of man,
Wrote the ancients long ago.
And many with them still agree,
For there within are found many
Human arts brought to their apogee—
The rhetoric of the statesmen,
The melodies of musicians,
Delicate medicine, bustling commerce,
Inspiring architecture.
The virtues are on display
For all to see and imitate—
Temperance and fortitude,
Prudence together with justice.
But there is a more perfect way,
The way trodden by Saint Onuphry
And all the desert-dwellers
Of northern Africa. Thirsting
For the greatest Good, they fled
Distractions of the earthly city
For solitary places in the wild.
Here, wherever they settled,
Confounding human logic,
They raised up heavenly cities,
Monks and nuns living in community
Or all alone, and oftentimes
With angels, who fed to them
The Holy Mysteries of Christ.
In their cells and caves, the highest
Virtues manifested in their lives—
Faith, that God would lead them to the place
Of struggle, where salvation
Could be won. Hope, that Heaven’s Lord
Would sustain them against hunger
And thirst; the attacks of demons
And fallen passions. With the Sign
Of the Cross, psalmody, and the Name
Of Jesus, they prevailed against the latter
Two. And God sustained their bodies
With miraculous springs, fruits, and loaves
Of freshest bread. Love, for God
And man, they showed by seeing Christ
In everyone. With handicrafts
They banished idleness and gave o’er
Profits to the poor. With burning
Tears they begged God’s mercy for their lives
And for the world. They bore the sins
Of others and atoned for them,
While declaring their own selves
To be the worst of sinners.
Warm hospitality was offered
To every guest. The heart itself
Was made thus a wondrous home for God,
The desire for Whom lifted the holy
Ammas and abbas from the ground
As they prayed.
The utopia,
The no-place of the perfectionist
Dreamers is a reality,
A true-place where women and men
Become gods by Grace, not merely
In scorching African deserts
But wherever ascetic strivers
Seek to please God with all their soul
Unnoticed by their neighbors.
And they, each and all, shall become
Shimmering pillars and domes
And dear-worthy jasmines and roses
In the Eternal City of God.
--
Holy Ælfred the Great, King of England, South Patron, pray for us sinners at the Souð, unworthy though we are!
Anathema to the Union!
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