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mail : englishspoken@clairval.com
October 23,
2002
Our Lady of Holy Hope
Dear Friend of Saint
Joseph Abbey,
Europe's strength is found not
in her armaments, nor in her
knowledge—it is found in her
religion... Observe the
Christian faith. When you have
grasped its heart and its
strength, take them and give
them to China.» These words
from a Chinese diplomat, Shu
King-Shen, to his disciple, Lu
Zhengxiang, at the beginning
of his career, would lead the
latter to total consecration
to Christ in monastic life,
under the name of Dom Lu.
Lu Zhengxiang came into the
world in Shanghai on June 12,
1871. His father, Lu Yong-Fong,
belonged to a well-to-do
family. In 1854, he married Ou
Kin-Ling, and from their union
was born a little girl, who
soon died. It wasn't until
seventeen years later that the
home would have a second child,
Zhengxiang. In giving birth to
him, the mother contracted
dropsy, which would take her
away eight years later.
A
step
Lu Yong-Fong, a
religious and honest man, was
a Protestant catechist. Every
morning, on his way to work,
he would distribute tracts as
well as Bibles for the London
Missionary Society. His son
received baptism in this
Protestant environment, where
he tried out Christian charity
for the first time.
Protestantism was for him a
step «without which,» he
would later write, «I believe
that I would not have been
able to arrive at Catholicism.
I retain profound gratitude
for the kindness I received
from these missionaries.»
Indeed, the Christian
communities separated from
Rome, as the Second Vatican
Council teaches, suffer from
deficiencies, for they are
deprived of the unity desired
by Christ and do not possess
the fullness of the means of
salvation. Nevertheless, they
«have been by no means
deprived of significance and
importance in the mystery of
salvation. For the Spirit of
Christ has not refrained from
using them as means of
salvation which derive their
efficacy from the very
fullness of grace and truth
entrusted to the Church» (Decree
on Ecumenism, no. 3).
After having received private
instruction in the Chinese
classics, Lu Zhengxiang
entered the School of Foreign
Languages in Shanghai at the
age of thirteen and a half. At
this school he above all
learned French. When he was
21, he entered a school for
interpreters linked to the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
In 1893, he was sent as an
interpreter to the Chinese
Legation in Saint Petersburg,
Russia. There he met a teacher
who persuaded him to devote
himself to a diplomatic career.
This teacher, Shu King-Shen,
was completely immersed in
Confucian wisdom.
«Confucian doctrine,» wrote
Dom Lu in 1945, «is
essentially the traditional
wisdom of the ancient kings
who began the history of
China, in the third millennium
B.C. The documents of this
wisdom were edited and
published by Confucius in the
sixth century B.C., and form
our Chinese classics. China
has lived and still lives by
this philosophy and this
teaching; the nation owes to
it the harmony of its
political spirit and of its
government traditions, which
are directly based on the
principle of family life...»
Confucius (551-479 B.C.)
admitted the existence of God,
the Supreme Being, and
believed in Providence and in
the immortality of the soul,
although he remained
completely silent on the
destiny of the soul beyond the
grave. He limited himself to
giving his disciples practical
rules of social and political
morality. This is why, over
the course of the centuries,
Confucianism has split into
numerous groups.
Filial
piety
«We owe our parents,»
Dom Lu continues, «everything
which has enabled us, through
God's creative act, to become
and to be human persons,
endowed with the ability to
know, judge, and love, endowed
with freedom. The first and
most constant of our duties is
therefore gratitude towards
our parents. Through a
provision of God's kindness,
the entire Chinese race has
known, practiced, and
celebrated filial piety, from
before the distant era in
which Abraham, Isaac, and
Jacob founded the people for
whom, centuries later, Moses
would become the law-giver,
and from whom Jesus would be
born... Among the commandments
of God given by Moses, the
first which concerns our duty
towards others is precisely
the precept of filial piety.
The Hebrew law-giver attached
to the fulfillment of this
precept the promise of
permanence on earth—the
permanence of families, of
society, of race.»
The Catechism of the
Catholic Church teaches
that «[t]he fourth
commandment ... shows us the
order of charity. God has
willed that, after Him, we
should honor our parents to
whom we owe life... We are
obliged to honor and respect
all those whom God, for our
good, has vested with His
authority» (CCC,
2197). Two reasons can
motivate us to venerate
someone: this person's
excellence, and the benefits
received from him or her. It
is for this reason that we
must revere God before all
others, as He is infinitely
perfect and a universal
benefactor. Secondly, we must
venerate our parents and those
who hold legitimate authority
over us. Then come the other
members of our family and our
society.
Filial piety is, above all, an
inner feeling. Nevertheless,
it carries exterior
manifestations of respect and
obedience which are the normal
expressions of dependence. It
likewise extends to one's «fatherland,»
the very word coming from «father».
The fatherland is a moral and
civic community formed by men
and women united by the same
heritage of blood, land and
culture. Much more than an
instinct of putting down one's
roots, patriotism is an
attitude of intelligence and
will, a commitment to the
common patrimony, to keep,
increase, transmit and defend
it. Christian patriotism
rejects exaggerated
nationalism, which aims at
making the national interest
an absolute. The deification
of the fatherland or of the
state is a pagan theory.
Healthy patriotism, on the
contrary, is united with
awareness of the universal
solidarity of mankind, and is
not to be confused with this
false internationalism which
denies all differences in the
human community, and thus in
the fatherland itself. Jesus
Christ Himself had a
fatherland (cf. Lk. 4:23-24).
Can
one govern without God?
«My vocation was to be
a politician,» Dom Lu
confessed. «Chinese political
philosophy posed a very deep
question—could we govern man
if we did not aim at studying
the government of men as it is
exercised, with admirable
providence, by the Creator?
Could we truly govern, if we
did not aspire to assimilate
God's supreme principles and
methods of government, such
that they might become our own,
and that we ourselves might be
the worthy representatives of
the Creator's authority... You
will say to me, 'This is
religion!' I don't deny it.
But I answer: 'This is
politics!' And this is the
only politics worthy of the
name. This is superior
politics, and true politics,
which every man of government
has the rigorous duty of state
to begin learning, like a
humble disciple.»
In Beijing at the beginning of
the twentieth century, the
power of the Manchurian
dynasty was decaying as a
result of favoritism and
incompetence. Lu Zhengxiang's
superior, Mr. Shu, wished for
a rejuvenation of his country,
in the spirit of the founders
of Chinese civilization.
Christianity, and the Catholic
Church in particular, caught
his respectful attention. He
was struck by the existence of
a worldwide spiritual
government (the Papacy), which
dates back to the Founder of
the Christian faith. «Observe
the customs of the most
eminent officials from
European countries,» he
recommended to his disciple.
«When the moment arises, be
ready to replace the men in
Beijing, to begin a new
construction in China.» In
Beijing, to which he had just
been summoned as a
high-ranking official in the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
Mr. Shu was a victim of his
own patriotic self-sacrifice.
For having drawn the
government's attention to the
reforms to be undertaken
immediately, he was accused,
judged, and beheaded (1900),
then, six months later,
gloriously but uselessly
rehabilitated, cleared of his
«crime.» «What good does it
do to serve such a bad
government?» asked Mr. Lu...
But, considering the moral
necessity to remain faithful
to his master's task, he wrote,
«All hesitation before
responsibility is retreat.»
«My
bags are packed!»
Heaven then offered the
young diplomat the comfort of
a romantic interest. In Saint
Petersburg, he made the
acquaintance of Berthe Bovy,
daughter and granddaughter of
Belgian officers. She had
received an excellent
education from the Sisters of
Providence, and she taught
French in high Russian
society. The two young
people's liking grew to deep
love, and led them to marriage.
In Brussels, the Bovy family
did not understand: «A
Chinese man!» In the Chinese
Legation, they understood even
less: «You are ruining your
career! If you follow through
with your plans, you will not
be able to remain in the
Legation.»—«That's what I
expected... My bags are packed.»
But the Minister did not want
to lose the services of this
valuable associate.
Mr. Lu saw farther. He had met
and chosen an insightful,
French-speaking European woman,
a Catholic of high moral
values and perfect tact. She
was not a citizen of a great
Power, but of a small country,
which was quite a different
matter for a diplomat. The
wedding took place in Saint
Petersburg in February 1899.
The couple enjoyed perfect
marital harmony, but, to their
great disappointment, God did
not give them a child. In the
comforting environment of his
home, Mr. Lu reflected on that
which constitutes Europe's
strength, its Christian faith:
«From the point of view of
the man of action in search of
good,» he wrote, «I have
observed and considered the
Holy Church, having for my
rule a principle that Jesus
Christ Himself gave us: by its
fruits may you judge the tree
(cf. Mt. 7:20).... I have
recognized the quite clear
superiority of the Holy Roman
Church, which retains a living
treasure—the spiritual life
which flows from Jesus Christ
on the Cross, a life
manifested and distributed to
the faithful through the
channel of the seven
sacraments... The Mass and the
sacraments alone command
observation, reflection, and
respect...
«How has Christianity, which
has grown in the Western world
and has penetrated it to the
point of being an integral
part of it, succeeded in
attracting a man from the Far
East?... The unity, the
universality, the
disinterested ambition of the
Catholic Church find their
mainspring in the origin of
this institution. I would like
to say to my fellow countrymen:
read the Gospel, the Acts of
the Apostles, the Epistles.
Read the history of the
persecutions of the first
centuries of the Church and
the Acts of the martyrs. Take
all the pages of the history
of the Church. You will
conclude that it is an utterly
superior and unique social
development. Perhaps then you
will ask yourself the
question, 'Has the Creator
revealed Himself?'... How
civil authority must do
everything in its power to see
that such a fruitful
institution may flourish in
the heart of nations!»
These reflections by Mr. Lu
are in harmony with the recent
words of Pope John Paul II: «My
greatest concern for Europe is
that she retain her Christian
legacy and make it fruitful...
The Old World needs Jesus
Christ so as not to lose its
soul, so as not to lose that
which made it great in the
past and which, in itself,
arouses the admiration of
other peoples even today.
Indeed, it is by virtue of the
Christian message that the
great human values of the
dignity and inviolability of
the individual are affirmed in
consciences, as well as those
of freedom of conscience, the
dignity of work and of those
who perform it, the right of
each person to a dignified and
sure life, and thus
participation in the earth's
possessions, which God has
destined to be shared among
all men» (February 23, 2002).
The
influence of example
At the beginning of
1911, Mr. Lu confided to his
wife: «I promised that our
children would be Catholic.
Since we don't have any
children, what would you say
if I became Catholic?» Berthe
was delighted. On October 25,
1911, Father Lagrange, who had
blessed their marriage twelve
years earlier, officially
received the diplomat's
profession of the Catholic
faith. «My wife never raised
the question of religion with
me. It was enough for her to
be what she was—a true
Christian. This discretion
brought me to want to join the
Catholic Church even more, the
doors of which I would have
forbidden myself to enter had
she pushed me there.»
At the same time in China, the
revolution led by Dr. Sun
Yat-Sen progressed quickly. At
the beginning of 1912,
following personal
intervention by Mr. Lu, the
Emperor abdicated. The
provisional Parliament offered
the diplomat the portfolio of
the Foreign Ministry. This
date marked the beginning of
an eight-year period in
Beijing, during which he
exercised the greatest
responsibilities, even that of
Prime Minister. He took
advantage of this situation to
establish official diplomatic
relations between China and
the Holy See.
«Become
a disciple...»
In December 1920, Mr.
Lu retired for good from the
political scene. Two years
later, his wife's health
necessitated his return to
Europe. They moved to Locarno,
in Switzerland, where Mrs. Lu
was shortly thereafter
stricken with congestion.
Quite soon it became evident
that the illness would be long
and without hope of recovery.
While caring for his wife, Mr.
Lu remembered the suggestion
that Minister Shu King-Shen
had made to him thirty years
before: «When you have
finished your career, choose
the oldest society among those
in which is found the Church
you will have joined. If you
can, enter it; become a
disciple and observe the
interior life which must be
its secret...»
Mr. Lu tried to make his wife
understand the fatal nature of
her illness. At this time
appeared Elisabeth Leseur's Diary
and Daily Thoughts,
published by Father Leseur,
her husband, who, after his
wife's death, had become a
Dominican. Mr. and Mrs. Lu
read it out aloud to each
other. «For fun, I sometimes
gave my dear invalid the name
'Elisabeth': 'You are a true
imitator of Elisabeth Leseur...
I don't know if I could become
a Father Leseur someday...'
She smiled: 'Why not? With
divine grace and your
willingness!...' After sharing
these confidences, both of us
yielded to the vocation that
God had clearly assigned us.»
Mrs. Lu died on April 16,
1926.
Having confided his desire to
his wife's confessor, Mr. Lu
received from him direction
towards the life of a regular
Benedictine Oblate. A Regular
Oblate participates in every
aspect of community life, but
is not bound by monastic vows.
Mr. Lu went to Saint-André
Abbey in Bruges, Belgium,
where the Abbot advised him to
become a full monk and then to
go on to the priesthood. Thus,
on October 4, 1927, he donned
the Benedictine habit under
the name of Brother Pierre-Célestin.
In 1932, he made his solemn
profession, but feeling weary,
he believed, with his Abbot's
permission, that he should
forgo the long years of study
necessary to enter the
priesthood. Nevertheless, on
May 3, 1933, one of his
friends came from Shanghai to
offer him a chalice, a gift
from twenty of his former
colleagues from the Chinese
diplomatic corps, all
non-Christians. «But, I've
given up on becoming a priest!»—«We
will be very disappointed,»
his friend replied. Discerning
the hand of God in this step,
he began his studies, not for
him, but for the Church and
his country. On June 29, 1935,
he received priestly
ordination.
However, the thought of
celebrating the Holy Sacrifice
of the Mass every day
terrified him: «For me to
dare approach the Almighty
every day!... It'll kill me...»
But, after an illness that
made him think, Dom Lu made
this confession: «Our Father
Saint Benedict says in the
Rule that God is a Master and
that He is a Father. I have
remembered that He is a Master;
I forgot that He is our Father.
During this illness, the Lord
deigned to enlighten me. Since
I am offering the Mass to God
our Father, I will not be
afraid of celebrating it
anymore!» Indeed, Saint
Benedict says, quoting Saint
Paul, that the monks should
remember that they have
received the spirit of
adoption of children, by which
we cry out, Abba, meaning
Father! (Rm. 8:15; cf. Rule,
ch. 2).
Mr. Lu had entered a
Benedictine monastery in
Belgium, his wife's fatherland,
with the goal of opening up a
new avenue to his people,
linking them to the Church
founded by the Son of God made
man. The particular importance
of his career and vocation
encouraged Pope Pius XII to
confer upon him, on May 19,
1946, the title of honorary
abbot. This elevation was the
sign of a more intense
apostolate. For Dom Lu, the
East suffered because it had
in large part not yet known
the Messiah. The West suffered
because, having known Him,
many had strayed from Him. «The
problem of international
relations is not, first and
foremost, one of political
order—it is, above all else,
one of intellectual and moral
character,» he wrote. «At
its base, this problem is that
of links and separations that
the relationships or
differences between
civilizations establish
between men.» This is why he
pleaded for works promoting
encounters between Christian
and Chinese culture.
The
meeting of East and West
At the time of his
priestly ordination, his
friends who were Chinese
diplomats addressed this
tribute to him: «Mr. Lu knows
the Chinese way of life, and
now, he is becoming a priest
in the West. He will bring
about in himself the fusion of
the East and the West in the
moral realm. He will prove
that in the West, no more than
in China, material
civilization does not have
precedence over spiritual
civilization. And thus will he
also work to spread justice
and peace in his country.»
This message agrees with the
words of the Holy Father in
Poland, June 3, 1997: «There
will be no European unity
until it is based on unity of
the spirit... The foundations
of the identity of Europe are
built on Christianity. And its
present lack of spiritual
unity arises principally from
the crisis of this Christian
self-awareness... For without
Christ it is impossible to
build lasting unity... How can
a 'common house' for all of
Europe be built, if it is not
built with the bricks of men's
consciences, baked in the fire
of the Gospel, united by the
bond of a fraternal social
love, the fruit of the love of
God?» (Address for
the Thousandth Anniversary of
the Death of St Adalbert).
At the end of 1948, serious
illness brought Dom Lu to the
point of death. Shortly before
his passing, he said, «Only a
few hours more... to see Our
Lord! To see Our Lord! What
happiness!» His confessor
suggested to him, «This is
the hour to offer your
suffering with Jesus on the
Cross.» He nodded his assent,
the last expression of his
thoughts before a long agony.
On January 15, 1949, at 11:50
A.M., the day and hour of the
twentieth anniversary of his
religious profession, he
breathed his last, at the age
of 78. But for those who love
God, death does not exist—it
is nothing more than a passage
from life on earth to eternal
life.
In his posthumous book, The
Encounter Between the
Humanities and the Discovery
of the Gospel, which he
left merely hand-typed, can be
read this passage, where the
filial piety dear to Confucius
finds itself greatly elevated
by the eyes of faith: «At the
hour of His final agony, Jesus'
strength of soul was
magnanimously revealed in His
filial piety towards His
Father and also for the Virgin
Who had carried Him in Her
Womb and Whose Child He had
remained. The testament
through which He entrusted His
Mother to the disciple whom He
loved is a testament of filial
piety. Can Mary not regard as
Her children all those who are
regenerated in the blood of
Her Son?»
May Our Lady grant us too the
grace of a filial attitude
towards Our Father in Heaven!
This attitude is manifested in
a proper reverence for elders
and superiors, and is the
source of divine blessings,
according to God's promise to
Moses: Honor your father
and your mother... that you
may have a long life and
prosperity in the land which
the Lord, your God, is giving
you (Dt. 5:16).
Dom Antoine Marie osb
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