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HR 1 – In Place of Materialism, Gratitude – The Holy Rule of St. Benedict with Fr. Mauritius Wilde O.S.B – Discerning Hearts Podcast

Published 4 days, 21 hours ago
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In Place of Materialism, Gratitude – The Holy Rule of St. Benedict with Fr. Mauritius Wilde O.S.B

In this episode of The Holy Rule of St. Benedict: A Spiritual Path for Today’s World, Kris McGregor and Fr. Mauritius Wilde reflect on Chapter 34 of the Rule, “On the Distribution of Goods According to Need.” Drawing from St. Benedict’s teaching rooted in the Acts of the Apostles, Fr. Mauritius explores how gratitude becomes the remedy to materialism. Rather than measuring wellbeing by consumption, the Benedictine vision proposes something countercultural: whoever needs less should give thanks, and whoever needs more should receive with humility. The goal is not deprivation, but peace within community. By replacing entitlement with gratitude, the Rule fosters freedom, justice, and interior joy.

The conversation addresses the pressures of modern culture that continually tell us we need more to be happy. Through the Benedictine lens, true contentment comes from living in the presence of God, recognizing daily bread as gift, and practicing disciplined gratitude through prayer. Humility begins with acknowledging our limitations and real needs, and that community flourishes when each person receives what is truly necessary. Gratitude becomes not a sentiment, but a spiritual exercise that leads to freedom, peace, and deeper communion with God and others.


From the Holy Rule of St. Benedict Chapter 34:

CHAPTER XXXIV.

Whether all ought equally to receive what is needful.

As it is written: “Distribution was made to every one, according as he had need.”177 By this, we do not say that there should be accepting of persons, which God forbid, but that due consideration should be shown to each one’s infirmities. Therefore, let him who needeth less, give God thanks, and be not grieved; and let him who needeth more, be humbled for his infirmity, and not lifted up for the mercy that is shown him; and thus all the members shall be in peace. Above all things, take heed there be no murmuring, by word or sign, upon any occasion whatsoever, If any one shall be found faulty in this respect, let him be subjected to most severe discipline.


Discerning Hearts Reflection Questions

  1. When I look honestly at my daily life, where do I notice a subtle pull toward “needing more”? What voices influence that desire?

  2. St. Benedict teaches that whoever needs less should give thanks. In what areas of my life can I rejoice in needing less rather than striving for more?

  3. When I do have a legitimate need, am I able to ask with humility and gratitude, or do I feel entitled to receive?

  4. How does regular prayer help me recognize the blessings alrea

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