Today the Church commemorates Saint Peter Damian, Benedictine monk, reformer, and eventually Cardinal, papal envoy, and diplomat during a particularly scandalous and corrupt period in ecclesiastical history: the middle of the 11th century.
So we're talking about a thousand years ago. It was an age of vast changes in the political landscape of Western Europe and extreme laxity among the clergy in the Western Church. Simony was rife, antipopes rose and fell alongside holy popes like Pope Saint Leo IX. It was also the age of the monastic renaissance that had begun the previous century with the Cluniac reform movement. At one point, Western Emperor (and Saint) Henry III was a lay Benedictine Oblate. His successor Henry IV, on the other hand, caused lots of trouble for the Church.
Saint Peter Damian loved the solitude of a hermitage, but he was often called upon to intervene in the ecclesiastical crises of the day, or to contribute from his great faith and intellectual acumen to theological controversies. He paved the way for the renewal of theology with his many writings, and is one of the saints who bears the title "Doctor of the Church." No doubt, active ministry in the midst of so many complex and conflicting circumstances was a source of much suffering for Peter, and he knew that of which he wrote in a letter — from which we cite an excerpt below — about the brevity of our afflictions in this life compared to the eternal glory that God promises us after this time of patience and endurance:
“This momentary light affliction is producing for us an eternal weight of glory beyond all comparison (2 Corinthians 4:17). Carefully examine these words of the apostle and diligently meditate on them…and be confident that whatever is short-lived will quickly pass away.
“Nor should you fail to notice, moreover, how aptly and exactly God’s words agree with one another so that after speaking of afflictions that are temporary and light to bear, he at once adds that they will yield an eternal weight of glory. And so, you should think about and compare these correlatives with each other: suffering and glory, temporary and eternal, light and weighty. Rejoice, therefore, and be glad that the suffering you endure is short-lived, and the glory that awaits you is eternal. Everything that you bear is light, all that you look for is weighty. Rejoice, I say, since in exchange for affliction you will receive glory; for what is light, something weighty; and for the temporary, an eternity will be yours.
“Consequently, amid hardships and trouble always lift up your eyes to him who after your afflictions is prepared to cherish you within the sweetness of his embrace, who after storms and tribulations will set you among the delights of heavenly peace, and will wipe away the tears from your eyes with the cloth of everlasting consolation…. With these and other texts of Holy Scripture, my dear friend, reinforce your spirit with patience, and happily look forward to the joy that will follow sadness. May hope encourage you in joyful expectations, and an ardent love inflame you.”








































