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department of work are also to be obeyed in that department. But none of us may, on any authority, act contrary to the guiding of our own consciences. The Ministers are, like the other members, under obedience to the Rule and Chapter, and are bound to exercise their authority, not in a spirit of partiality or pride or selfishness, but with equal consideration and love and with humble prayer for the divine wisdom.
DAY 12 The obligation of particular obedience within the Community we gladly accept, not as something different from the obedience which we owe to God, but rather as part of that obedience. We are confident that if God has called us to a life under Rule we will, in fulfilling the obligations of that life, be most truly obeying him and that, whatever limitations or humiliations our obedience may involve, will, if cheerfully accepted, be a means by which pride is vanquished and a more perfect consecration achieved. When working away from the Community, we should put ourselves under the discipline of the parish or society in which we are staying.
The Three Ways of Service DAY 13 We seek to serve our Master by the life of devotion, by sacred study and by works. In the life of the Community as a whole all these three ways must find full and balanced expression. It is not, indeed to be expected that we will all devote ourselves equally to each of these three tasks. It is right that our several employments should vary according to the particular ability which God has given us, as that some of us should, with the approval of the Minister, give ourselves in large measure to prayer and contemplation, others of us to the pursuit of learning and the writing of books and others of us mainly to the ministry of active service. Yet must room be found in the lives of us all for at least some measure of each of these three employments.
Prayer DAY 14 Praise and prayer constitute the atmosphere in which we must strive to live. We must endeavor to maintain a constant recollection of the presence of God and of the unseen world. An ever-deepening devotion to Christ is the hidden source of all our strength and joy. He is for us the One all-lovely and adorable, God incarnate, crucified and risen, whose love is the inspiration of service and the reward of sacrifice.
DAY 15 That our union with our Lord and Master may be ever renewed and strengthened, we unite in offering daily before God the memorial of his death and passion, and feeding often upon his sacrificial life. The holy Eucharist is the center around which our life revolves. It is above all the heart of our prayer life. The time of Morning Prayer is the preparation of mind and spirit for entrance within the sanctuary. The meditation is the opportunity for quiet tryst with him who, through the sacrament, is present inwardly, and for feeding on him in our hearts by faith with thanksgiving. Services of intercession and thanksgiving are times when we who have been thus joined with God in communion and meditation may plead with God in sure reliance on his promise: if you remain in me and my words remain in you, you may ask whatever you will will and you shall receive it, and also thank him for continuous experience of its fulfillment. Evening Prayer is the renewed offering of praise and prayer to the same Lord at the end of the day's work. Night Prayer is the Master's blessing of protection and peace and, in its closing silence, the hearts of us all are together steeped afresh in the peace of that inward uncreated light which, as the shadows of life deepen, abides unchanged.
DAY 16 We must strive ever to remember how essential is the work of prayer to every department of our lives. Without the constant renewal of divine grace the spirit flags, the will is weakened, the conscience grows dull, the mind loses its freshness and even the bodily vigor is impaired. We must, therefore, always be on our guard against the constant temptation to let other work encroach upon the hours of prayer, remembering that if we seek in this way to increase the bulk of our activity it can only be at the cost of its true quality and value. We must be regular and punctual in our attendance at corporate prayer. We must also bear in mind that it is of little value to be present at the common devotions in a formal or careless spirit. We must seek to make of each office an offering of true devotion from the heart. The reverent, ordered and earnest offering of the corporate worship is the very heart of our Community life.
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