July 9. A close reading of Benedict, almost from the first day, quickly reveals that we all have a responsibility to serve others—without pride, without resentment, and, when possible, without delay.
Our call to care for one another lies at the very heart of our faith tradition. Love God. Love one another as Christ has loved us. And perhaps we need to ask ourselves a very simple question: What does love look like when it gets up in the morning and goes to work?
Surely, much of the time, it looks like service.
For the cellarer, we understand this well enough. The cellarer has been entrusted with the goods of the monastery and called to respond to the needs of the community. Benedict is remarkably careful in his description. This person must not be arrogant, harsh, wasteful, or slow. The cellarer is to be like a parent to the whole community. Even when unable to provide what is requested, Benedict insists that a kind word must be offered.
But what about you and me?
Are we really called to serve one another with this same attentiveness?
I believe the answer is yes.
The call did not begin with Benedict. Jesus knelt on the floor and washed the feet of his disciples. The one they called Lord took the position of a servant. He did not simply preach love; he picked up a towel and a basin and brought love to life.
The desert elders understood this. Their severe lives of prayer and self-denial were never meant to create isolated spiritual athletes. At their best, the disciplines of the desert were intended to wear away the tyranny of the self so that room might be made for God and neighbor. Abba Agathon could imagine perfect charity as taking upon himself the suffering of another. It is an astonishing image: the spiritual life measured not by how holy I appear, but by how willing I am to carry another's burden.
Augustine, centuries later, reminded his people that although he was a bishop for them, he was a Christian with them. Office did not separate him from the common life. We belong to one another. Augustine speaks of Christians bearing one another's burdens as the law of Christ.
Luther would make the point with one of his wonderful paradoxes: the Christian, set free by faith, becomes the servant of all. Freedom in Christ is not freedom from the neighbor. It is freedom from the anxious protection of the self so that we may finally turn outward in love.
And here, perhaps, Benedict challenges us.
We may be tempted to think that service belongs to people who have been assigned the job—the cellarer, the nurse, the pastor, the volunteer, the caregiver. But Benedictine life will not let us escape so easily. The Rule eventually calls the members of the community to obedience toward one another. The cellarer simply shows us, in concentrated form, what a life attentive to others might look like.
Of course, we have a duty to care for ourselves. Of course, we cannot do everything for everyone. Service without wisdom can become exhaustion, resentment, or even an unhealthy need to be needed.
But that is not the center of the Benedictine heart.
The question is simpler and, perhaps, more demanding:
Am I becoming indifferent to the needs of those around me?
Richard Rohr often reminds us that contemplation must finally become engagement—that love becomes real in relationship, in doing, in connecting, in life lived “with and for the neighbor.” The spiritual life cannot end inside us.
Perhaps each morning we should imagine that Benedict has quietly placed the cellarer's keys in our hands.
Not the keys to the monastery storeroom.
The keys to whatever we possess today—our time, our patience, our experience, our attention, our resources, our capacity to encourage, perhaps simply our willingness to stop and listen.
These are the goods entrusted to us.
And somewhere, before this day is over, someone will need something we have been given.
We are called to serve.