Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 January 2024
This is the story of one Dominican’s following the Gospel with faith, hope and above all charity.
There was a restlessness about Herbert. All his life he was in some ways an adolescent. He had the virtues of an adolescent, and sometimes an adolescent’s infuriating ways. But our weaknesses, under God’s grace become our strengths. Immensely loyal to his friends, he liked to shock. Questing, critical, radical, ever seeking for the meaning of life, and for ‘meaning’ tout court, he could be quite arrogant in his own convictions. It did not mean that he could not brook disagreement. Intolerant he could be of what he called ‘playing games’, but he delighted in argument. He could not resist being outrageous at the expense of pompous authority. His Catholic orthodoxy, expressed in contemporary idiom, was unshakeable; his Dominican, questioning, obedience was absolute. Like adolescents, when asked questions which they find intrusive, he was economical in speech; this he honed into a fine precision, admirably editing out superfluous words. The adolescent’s unsureness of himself he turned into the humility of loving himself not for his own achievements, but for God’s gift of being God’s lover, able to speak with, and thank God. Still he hated going into print and agonised over sermons. Leaving instructions to any literary executor he talked about the “the bits of paper I leave behind. ... If I hear you have burnt the lot I shall merely add this to the eternal (no! perpetual) sufferings I shall be undergoing”
1 private letter.
2 Daniel 12, 1
3 Daniel 12, 2
4 Religion and Philosophy, ed Martin Warner, Cambridge
5 2 Tim. 5, 6‐7, 17
6 New Blackfriars, Feb. 1967)
7 Clements, Simon and Lawlor, Monica, The McCabe Affair, Sheed and Ward, 1967Google Scholar.
8 New Blackfriars, Oct. 1970.
9 God Matters. The Easter Vigil, p. 103.
10 ibid. p. 104.
11 ibid. p. 112.
12 ibid. p. 111.
13 The New Creation, p. 173.
14 ibid. p. 172.
15 ibid. pp. 183, 184.