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John of Ruysbroeck

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The blessed John of Ruysbroeck.
The blessed John of Ruysbroeck.

The Blessed John of Ruysbroeck (Dutch: Jan van Ruusbroec) (1293 or 1294, RuisbroekDecember 2, 1381, Groenendaal) was one of the Flemish mystics.

Contents

[edit] Life

[edit] Until his ordination

John had a devout mother, who brought him up in the Catholic faith; of his father we know nothing. John's surname Van Ruusbroec is not a surname in the modern sense but a toponym that refers to his native hamlet, modern-day Ruisbroek near Brussels (compare John of Salisbury or Democritus of Abdera). At the age of eleven he left his mother, departing without leave or warning, to place himself under the guidance and tuition of his uncle, Jan Hinckaert, a canon of St. Gudule's, Brussels, who with a fellow-canon, Francis van Coudenberg, was living according to his Apostolic views. This uncle provided for Ruysbroeck's education with a view to the priesthood. In due course, John was presented with a prebend in St. Gudule's church, and ordained in 1317. His mother had followed him to Brussels, entered a Béguinage there, and died shortly before his ordination.

[edit] Priest in Brussels

For twenty-six years Ruysbroeck continued to lead, together with his uncle Hinckaert and Van Coudenberg, a life of extreme austerity and retirement. At that time the Brethren of the Free Spirit were causing controversy in the Netherlands and one of them, a woman named Bloemardinne, was particularly active in Brussels, propagating her beliefs chiefly by means of popular pamphlets. Ruysbroeck responded with pamphlets also written in the native tongue (Dutch). Nothing of these treatises remains. The controversy had a permanent effect on Ruysbroeck: his later writings bear constant reference, direct and indirect, to the 'heretical' views expressed in these times, and he always wrote in the country's native language, chiefly with a view to counteracting these writings which he viewed as heretical.

[edit] Priest in Groenendaal

The desire for a more retired life, and possibly also the persecution which followed Ruysbroeck's attack on Bloemardinne, induced the three friends to quit Brussels in 1343 for the hermitage of Groenendaal, in the neighbouring Sonian Forest, which was made over to them by John III, Duke of Brabant.

But here so many disciples joined the little company that it was found expedient to organize into a duly-authorized religious body. The hermitage was erected into a community of canons regular on March 13, 1349, and eventually it became the motherhouse of a congregation, which bore its name of Groenendaal. Francis van Coudenberg was appointed first provost, and Blessed John Ruysbroeck prior. Hinckaert refrained from making the canonical profession lest the discipline of the house should suffer from the exemptions required by the infirmities of his old age; he dwelt, therefore, in a cell outside the cloister and there a few years later died.

This period, from his religious profession (1349) to his death (1381), was the most active and fruitful of Ruysbroeck's career. His fame as a man of God, as a sublime contemplative and a skilled director of souls, spread beyond the bounds of Flanders and Brabant to Holland, Germany, and France. All sorts and conditions of men sought his aid and counsel. His writings were eagerly caught up and rapidly multiplied, especially in the cloisters of the Netherlands and Germany; early in the fifteenth century they are to be found also in England. Among the more famous visitors to Groenendaal mention is made of Johannes Tauler, but though the German preacher certainly knew and appreciated his writings, it is not established that he ever actually saw Ruysbroeck. Gerard Groote in particular venerated him as a father and loved him as a friend. And through Groote, Ruysbroeck's influence helped to mould the spirit of the Windesheim School, which in the next generation found its most famous exponent in Thomas à Kempis.

A depiction of Jan van Ruysbroeck
A depiction of Jan van Ruysbroeck

[edit] After death

John's relics were carefully preserved and his memory honoured as that of a saint. When Groenendaal Priory was suppressed by Joseph II in 1783, his relics were transferred to St. Gudule's, Brussels, where, however, they were lost during the French Revolution. John was beatified on December 1, 1908, by Pope St. Pius X.

No authentic portrait of John is known to exist; but the traditional picture represents him in the canonical habit, seated in the forest with his writing tablet on his knee, as he was in fact found one day by the brethren—rapt in ecstasy and enveloped in flames, which encircle without consuming the tree under which he is resting.

After his death, stories called him the Ecstatic Doctor or Divine Doctor, and his views formed a link between the Friends of God and the Brethren of the Common Life, the ideas which may have helped to bring about the Reformation.

[edit] Works and philosophy

Of Ruysbroeck's works, the treatise The Seven Steps of the Ladder of Spiritual Love is the one that is currently most-readily available. Of the various treatises preserved, the best-known and the most characteristic is that entitled The Spiritual Espousals. It is divided into three books, treating respectively of the active, the interior, and the contemplative life.

Literally, Ruysbroeck wrote as the spirit moved him. He loved to wander and meditate in the solitude of the forest adjoining the cloister; he was accustomed to carry a tablet with him, and on this to jot down his thoughts as he felt inspired so to do. Late in life he was able to declare that he had never committed aught to writing save by the motion of the Holy Ghost.

In none of his treatises do we find anything like a complete or detailed account of his system; perhaps, it would be correct to say that he himself was not conscious of elaborating any system. In his dogmatic writings he explains, illustrates, and enforces traditional teachings with remarkable force and lucidity. In his ascetic works, his favourite virtues are detachment, humility and charity; he loves to dwell on such themes as flight from the world, meditation upon the Life, especially the Passion of Christ, abandonment to the Divine Will, and an intense personal love of God.

In common with most of the German mystics Ruysbroeck starts from God and comes down to man, and thence rises again to God, showing how the two are so closely united as to become one. But here he is careful to protest: "There where I assert that we are one in God, I must be understood in this sense that we are one in love, not in essence and nature." Despite this declaration, however, and other similar saving clauses scattered over his pages, some of Ruysbroeck's expressions are certainly rather unusual and startling. The sublimity of his subject-matter was such that it could scarcely be otherwise. His devoted friend, Gerard Groote, a trained theologian, confessed to a feeling of uneasiness over certain of his phrases and passages, and begged him to change or modify them for the sake at least of the weak. Later on, Jean Gerson and then Bossuet both professed to find traces of unconscious pantheism in his works. But as an offset we may mention the enthusiastic commendations of his contemporaries, Groote, Tauler, à Kempis, John of Schoonhoven, and in subsequent times of the Franciscan van Herp, the Carthusians Denis and Laurentius Surius, the Carmelite Thomas of Jesus, the Benedictine Louis de Blois, and the Jesuit Leonardus Lessius. Ernest Hello and especially Maurice Maeterlinck have done much to make his writings known.

Ruysbroeck insisted that the soul finds God in its own depths, and noted three stages of progress in what he called the spiritual ladder of Christian attainment: (1) the active life, (2) the inward life, (3) the contemplative life. He did not teach the fusion of the self in God, but held that at the summit of the ascent the soul still preserves its identity. His works, of which the, most important were De vera contemplatione and De septem gradibus amoris, were published in 1848 at Hanover; also Reflections from the Mirror of a Mystic (1906) and Die Zierde der geistlichen Hochzeit (1901).

[edit] Books and Articles in English

TEXTS OF RUUSBROEC: John Ruusbroec. The Spiritual Espousals and other works.

 Introduction and translation by James A. Wiseman, O.S.B.
 Paulist Press, 1985.  [Classics of Western Spirituality]

The Spiritual Espousals. Translation by Eric Colledge.

 London: Faber and Faber, 1952.  Reprint by Christian Classics, 1983.

The Adornment of the Spiritual Marriage; The Sparkling Stone;

 The Book of the Supreme Truth.  Translation by C.A.Wynschenk.
 Introduction and Notes by E.Underhill.  London: J.M.Dent, 1916

COMMENTARY: Louis Dupre, The Common Life. The Origins of Trinitarian Mysticism and

 Its Development by Jan van Ruusbroec.  New York: Crossroad, 1984

Paul Mommaers, The Land Within. The Process of Possessing and

 Being Possessed by God according to the Mystic Jan Van Ruysbroeck.
 Translated from Dutch by David N. Smith.  Chicago: Fransican Herald Press, 1975.

Evelyn Underhill, Ruysbroeck. London: G.Bell, 1915. Helmut Hatzfeld, "The Influence of Ramon Lull and Jan van Ruysbroeck

 on the Language of the Spanish Mystics"  Traditio 4: 337-397 (1946)

Wayne Teasdale, "Ruysbroeck's Mystical Theology" Parts 1 and 2.

 American Benedictine Review 35:82-96, 35:176-193 (1984)

Paul Mommaers and Norbert De Paepe (editors), Jan van Ruusbroec: The Sources,

 Content, and Sequels of his Mysticism.  Louvain: Leuven University Press, 1984.
 [Mediaevalia Lovaniensia, ser.1, stud.12]

[edit] External links and references

This article incorporates text from the public-domain Catholic Encyclopedia of 1913.
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