July 13 — Building the Cathedral
The wisdom of the ages has consistently taught that human life finds its deepest meaning not in what we possess, accomplish, or control, but in what we give of ourselves to others.
“Serve one another in love.”
Benedict’s invitation is clear. We are called to serve without resentment, without unnecessary distress, and without keeping an account of what our service has cost us. For such service does more than complete a task: it enlarges the heart, strengthens the community, and teaches us how to love.
Sister Joan Chittister makes a beautiful and demanding point when she reminds us that spirituality is not simply what we think about; it is what we do because of what we think.
That distinction is crucial.
It is possible to admire compassion without becoming compassionate. It is possible to speak eloquently about justice while ignoring the person beside us. It is possible to pray for the suffering of the world and remain impatient with the small inconveniences placed before us each day. Benedictine spirituality refuses to allow belief and behavior to drift apart. What we profess must eventually take flesh in what we do.
The spiritual life is revealed in the meal prepared, the phone call returned, the lonely person visited, the burden quietly shared. It appears in our willingness to listen when we are tired, to forgive when we have been wounded, and to perform an ordinary duty without needing recognition.
Service is rarely dramatic. More often, it is repetitive, unnoticed, and inconvenient. Yet these small acts are the stones from which the great cathedral of community is built.
Sister Joan invites us to remember the greater cause through the familiar medieval tale of three stonemasons. A traveler asked each worker what he was doing.
The first replied, “I am sanding down this block of marble.”
The second said, “I am preparing a foundation.”
The third answered, “I am building a cathedral.”
All three were performing the same labor. The difference lay in what each believed the labor meant.
So much of life depends upon the story we tell ourselves about the work before us. One person sees only the burden. Another sees the immediate task. A third sees the holy purpose hidden within it.
Perhaps this is what Benedict wants us to understand. We are not merely washing dishes, attending meetings, caring for a spouse, comforting a neighbor, or completing another ordinary responsibility. We are helping to build something larger than ourselves. We are constructing a community in which people may feel safe, valued, remembered, and loved.
We may never see the cathedral completed. Indeed, much of what we build will outlive us. We place one stone of patience upon another stone of kindness. We strengthen the foundation with forgiveness. We open windows through which compassion may enter. We raise a shelter beneath which another human being may stand.
The tragedy of our age may be that we have become very skilled at seeing the stone and very poor at seeing the cathedral. We measure efficiency, productivity, and personal advantage, while forgetting the greater work of becoming a people capable of loving one another.
Benedict calls us back to that greater vision.
We are called to serve, not because we are less important than others, but because every person is infinitely important. We are called to love, not merely as a feeling, but as a practice—a daily discipline of attention, sacrifice, patience, and care.
The smallest act of service may seem insignificant. But nothing done in love is ever truly small.
Each kindness lays another stone.
Each act of mercy strengthens the foundation.
Each moment of faithful service helps to build the cathedral.