Showing items filed under “The Rev. Canon Dr. Victor Lee Austin”

Drone - and Layers - on the Camino

 It was the drone overhead that did it. I’m walking alone on this particular stretch of the Camino when I hear an unusual buzzing sound. Sunny day, fields of early grain beside me, beautiful weeds (and pansies among them!) in the side ditches of this dirt path for people on foot and on bicycle (and perhaps on horse, although I had yet to see any equestrians): the mountains distant to the right, blue sky, vibrant colors from God’s palette; birds chirping: there are no cars to be heard, no other human voices, no other sounds except those of nature . . . and this darned buzzing thing. I looked and found it, not close to the ground but high, its four propeller arms distinguishable though far away. I wondered how big it was, what was it doing. Indeed, why was it here?

I am likely never to know. I mentioned it at dinner to a peregrina, a woman from Maine. She was a reserved woman, the sort who largely sticks to herself; I had already learned she had moved back to Maine, her home, to take care of her aging parents. In short, she was quiet, reserved, self-sacrificing, and a lover of long walks. But when I mentioned this darned drone she, as we say, lit up. There are people, she says with dismay, who walk their whole lives as if they are characters in an ongoing film. They constantly record what’s happening to them. Someone may have been, someone may actually be walking the Camino now and taking a drone along to film the thing. I might be in someone else’s Camino film. 

Such was her speculation. I hope didn’t say anything inappropriate for the camera!

— 

In the Middle Ages, millions of pilgrims walked to the tomb of Saint James in Santiago de Compostella; in recent decades this “Camino” has seen a resurgence of popular interest. I have a thought to share about what it means to take a pilgrimage walk in 2024. Although these reflections are born out of the Camino, they could apply to any modern walking pilgrimage. 

To walk the Camino is not, it seems to me, a retreat or an escape from the world. Rather, it is an immersement in nature that is rare in our lives, an immersement that comes with a separation from the daily occupations and distractions that surround us, clinging so closely that they suppress contemplation of things bigger than the quotidian. But it is not an escape.

I looked at the landscape around me. If it were just 50 years ago, there would not be any jet stream exhaust streams across the sky. There would not be that blasted drone! There would not be the occasional cell tower stuck on the side of a centuries-old building. There would not be the huge windmills along the ridges of mountains. Go back 200 years and there would be no cars, no tractors, and no roads built to accommodate them. The pathways that cut through the landscape would be different. Go back 500 years and the stone buildings which today have no roofs would have been solid and inhabited. Go back 1000 years and some of those buildings would be new, but only a few of them. Go back 2000 years and there would be no churches, no news of Jesus having been proclaimed yet, no St. James to have traveled here with the gospel. 

 In other words, the landscape is layered in time. What the Camino is, I believe, is not a shedding of the modern world but rather an experience of an older world, a more natural world, a slower world, rising up from the depths. That older world is always with us, but we generally don’t think we need it and accordingly pay it no heed. T. S. Eliot points to this in “Burnt Norton,” the first of Four Quartets: the presence of old worlds in our present one, shadows that sometimes become visible, water in the dry pool, figures dancing. But the speaker in the poem (and here I think the speaker is likely expressing Eliot’s own view) says we have to leave, we can’t stay, that humankind cannot bear very much reality.

Well, on the Camino you can bear it. The Camino is a privileged place for the old to come and be present with the new. We should not want to escape the drones, the cell phones, the cars, and all the rest. What we can do is bring into the present more of the deep past. This is the way of true liberation. It is what all prayer is, and perhaps it is quintessentially what the Eucharist is. The Eucharist has at its heart the call to remember: “Do this in remembrance of me.” In the Eucharist, the most modern stuff is co-present with the deepest thing in reality, and it is so by means of our remembering.

On some days, as I walk where feet have trod for a thousand years, I am able to attend a mass. It is, of course, in a Catholic church, and it is in Spanish (except, as I wrote last week, when it is in French!). To be present for a mass in a language one barely grasps is an experience familiar and strange at the same time. Almost all the churches on the Camino are older than my native country. They were doing this ancient “remembering” in Spain before anyone on the western side of the Atlantic had heard of Jesus. When you pray, when you participate in the Eucharist, all that is coming to bear on you, on our local situation and everyone in it. Jesus, the deepest level of reality, is making himself known. 

It may be that you need to quit social media. In fact, I think you should. It may mean you need to simplify your life severely. We all need to do better about handling distractions. But to pray, to have Jesus present because you are remembering him—this is not a retreat from the real world of 2024, the world with drones and airplanes and a chicken in every pot and a phone in every pocket. To remember in this way is to understand what all those things really mean.

The Frenchies

For nine years, they’ve been walking the Camino, one week per year. They all come from Paris and they all belong to the same Catholic parish. They bring a priest with them and have various daily prayer times (for instance, Compline) as well as a daily mass. Each year they pick up at the spot they ended the previous year. They started in Le Puy, the origin of one of the traditional Caminos that begin in France. (From Le Puy to Santiago de Compostela in Spain is 1600 km.) This year they picked up in Rioja, Spain, and finished at a town on the edge of the Meseta in Castilla y León.

It was in San Juan de Ortega that I first saw them. We were all staying in an albergue founded by San Juan who, in the 12th century, saw the need for pilgrims having protection in that little-populated area from violence and harsh weather. To meet that need Juan founded an Augustinian monastery, which somehow still stands and still harbors pilgrims. (The monks, alas, are all gone.) We were waiting for dinner that evening, soaking up welcome warmth from the sun, and I was looking for people to sit with who spoke English. Thus on that occasion I stayed away from them.

The next day, when I got to the albergue I intended to stay at, there they were. This was a much smaller space, adjacent to the village’s antique church. I always try to enter churches, even when they are expected to be closed, so about 5:30 I walked to this one—and the doors were open! Inside a couple of elderly Spanish ladies were busily and noisily lighting candles and so forth, so I sat down. Eventually a man appeared and announced to them he was the priest. He was, of course, one of the French group. And shortly all 15 were there, and a few of us curious outsiders, for an unannounced mass in a foreign language—French. They sang beautifully and spontaneously. They had a conversation about the Gospel in place of a sermon; I couldn’t follow that but I did hear the proclamation Je suis le pain de vie (“I am the bread of life”). At communion I went up for a blessing; Père Philippe said (in English) “Jesus is always with you” as he signed my forehead.

From that day, it seemed I kept running into them—at mass in the next city, at the albergue in the next, and at mass on their final evening. I learned of their life, the life of ordinary but serious Christians in their place. I learned of the hostility toward the church in some parts of Paris—broken windows and so on—although their neighborhood was “not so bad.” This came up as one of those strange twists that translation causes. I had spoken of the need for evangelism in our age, which is marked by increasing opposition to Christianity. I meant things like the ideas that are simply presupposed (for instance, that we have the right to choose the time and means of our own death). But they heard it as particular violent actions. Both, of course, are happening.

One man told me that he had earlier in his life fallen away from the faith. But when he and his wife put their children in a Catholic school (“a good school”) he started seeing the good in the church, and it brought back his faith. His summary: I came back to faith through my children’s education. He reads the Bible daily. Like all the others in this group, he has that little Catholic “Magnificat” book that comes out seasonally and has the prayers and readings for every day. He prays for his children, who have fallen away from the church; I said, “Maybe when they have children . . .”

They liked me and, as best they could understand, appreciated me as an Anglican priest. I liked them, wanted to know more of their stories, wanted our time together to continue.

But it ended this morning (as I write this): they departed for a train towards home. We have promised to “pray for and with” each other. This is a particularly poignant separation for me. On the Camino, others have talked with me about these separations; if we think about it, we realize it is happening every day. You share a bit of your heart so easily on the Camino. You get access to a bit of the heart of someone else. And then you part, and you might never see each other again in this life.

Yet, as I thought as I left these dear French folk, even if I never see them again, we have the hope of seeing each other in a future life that will never end.

— 

Out & About: As I wrote earlier: Once I emerge from the Camino I am to preach on May 26, Trinity Sunday, at St. Matthew’s Cathedral in Dallas. And the next Good Books & Good Talk seminar will be at St. Matthew’s on June 2, on Klara and the Sun by Kazuo Ishiguro.

 

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The Rev. Canon Victor Lee Austin. Ph.D., is the Theologian-in-Residence for the diocese and is the author of several books including, "Friendship: The Heart of Being Human" and "A Post-Covid Catechesis.: