The Portal April 2014 | Page 22

THE P RTAL April 2014 Page 10 The Sorrow of Nature: The Way of the Cross with George Congreve SSJE and St Thérèse of Lisieux Reviewed by Sister Deirdre Michael Clark SBVM Older Anglicans may still have the works of George Congreve SSJE on their shelves, but he is now unknown to younger generations and it is doubtful whether Catholics have ever come across his writings, so we owe a debt to the Archdeacon of Hampstead, Fr Luke Miller, for making these extracts available. Nature and Beauty In the third talk, Nature and Beauty, Luke Miller quotes passages from the writings of both which show how they saw natural beauty as the reflection of the beauty of God. Thérèse tended to reflect on the beauty of flowers, and can sometimes appear sentimental, but there is Catholic League nothing sentimental in her awe Centenary Pilgrimage at the sight of the ocean when The first part of the book she was a child, which she never consists of three talks given to forgot: ‘I couldn’t take my eyes the Catholic League Centenary off its majesty, the roaring of Pilgrimage to Our Lady of its waves, everything spoke to Walsingham in 2013. my soul of God’s grandeur and power.’ George Congreve, too, They bring together the spiritual dwelt upon the things of nature insights of George Congreve and where he found beauty, and in Thérèse of Lisieux. Living at much the same time, but beauty he found God. coming from very different traditions, they share the deep thirst for sanctity which is the mark of the true ‘The Sorrow of Nature’ mystic. Fr Congreve writes: ‘The tiniest token of divine The next section of the book, ‘The Sorrow of Nature’, life in any soul is the desire to advance in grace. And a letter written on Robben Island, describes how a soul the direction of Christian advance will always be from might be moved from the things of this world to union the outward to the inward, from form to motive, from with God. George Congreve wrote from his annual activity to love.’ retreat. ‘No talk, no newspaper, but the prayer of the longing of nature on the sea and in the sky, and the Parallel with these thoughts, we find in the writings human prayer of silence in the heart.’ The Archdeacon of Thérèse her teaching on the Little Way. Wanting to of Hampstead confesses: It is for me one of the greatest be a saint, she saw herself as too small to do the heroic things Congreve wrote and I am always moved to tears acts of the great saints. She would instead look for a when I read it. direct way, a straight way, a little way, the way of love. Letting go of everything except Christ led both to a Stations of the Cross Finally, the Stations of the Cross, with meditations theology of suffering. by Fr George Congreve. This is not there to be read, it Childhood and Old Age is there to be prayed, and we can only be grateful that The second of Fr Luke Miller’s talks, on Childhood such insights into the way of the cross have been made and Old Age, is particularly moving. For Fr Congreve, available to us. old age should bring with it not a second childhood but a new childhood, which brings him very close to Altogether, this is a book that will repay reflective the mature spiritual childhood of Thérèse. He quotes and prayerful reading, preferably more than once. from the foundress of a religious community in her old age. ‘I think when you have lost everything you “The Sorrow of Nature” by Luke Miller; have in the world as I have, such a wonderful new life is published by the Catholic League price £6 comes into you’. www.unitas.org.uk