Forty-one years ago today, while attending a conference of monks in Bangkok, Thailand, Thomas Merton (pictured here), a Trappist monk and author, was accidentially electrocuted. It was an appalling loss of a brilliant writer and thinker, whose autobiography, The Seven Storey Mountain, published in 1948 when he was just 33 years old, gained international fame and still is read a lot today.
As the biography of Merton to which I've linked you in the previous paragraph notes, Merton was "arguably the most influential American Catholic author of the twentieth century."
I first became aware of Merton the year he died. I was working on the afternoon Gannett newspaper in Rochester, N.Y., and was then the editor of a weekly tabloid called "listen. . ." inside the paper. I wrote a piece about Merton's newly released book, Faith and Violence: Christian Teaching and Christian Practice. I thought it was full of challenging insights.
In fact, I still have my 1968 copy of that book, and inside the cover are the instructions to the newspaper's art department to turn the book's cover into a display 32 picas wide and 8 inches deep. Well, as I say, I thought then and think now that Merton is deeper than that, but that's apparently all the space I could devote to showing readers the book's cover then.
Merton lived at the Trappist Abbey of Our Lady of Gethsemani in Kentucky, producing hundreds of articles and dozens of books from 1941 until his death. If you never have read any Merton, you can decide which of his books might interest you. In the meantime, I'll recommend three related books, none of them very recent.
The first is The Abbey of Gethsemani: Place of Peace and Paradox, by Dianne Aprile, who when she wrote this was a columnist with the Louisville Courier-Journal and a member, with me, of the National Society of Newspaper Columnists.
Next is Keeping the Faith: A Skeptic's Journey, by Fenton Johnson, who grew up right next to Gethsemani. It's a fascinating read.
And finally, Thomas Merton: Monk and Poet, a Critical Study, by George Woodcock.
Perhaps you have a favorite book either by or about Merton. If so, let us know. It seems to me the world today has a severe shortage of brilliant contemplative minds like Merton's. I'm not sure why, but if Merton were around I'm sure he'd have some good guesses.
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A COURT CASE WITH BIBLICAL ROOTS
The U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to rule on a really interesting case involving a Christian group at a college and the group's restrictions on membership that violate the college's rules about non-discrimination. The Christian Legal Society at the Hastings College of the Law in San Francisco no longer is a registered student organizaton because it decided that gays and lesbians could not be voting members or hold office. One appeals court ruled against the student group while in a different case, an appeals court ruled in favor of a similar group's membership restrictions. The high court will have to settle it. But, once more, none of this would be an issue if Christians did not misread scripture in such a way as to make them think discrimination of this sort of God's will.
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ANOTHER P.S.: For your holiday giving, don't be shy about buying my new book, They Were Just People: Stories of Rescue in Poland During the Holocaust, co-written with Rabbi Jacques Cukierkorn. To read about it and find several ways of ordering it, click here. And remember, all the royalties go to Holocaust-related charities, so feel good about buying lots of copies.