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The Fullness of Life: Bishop Erik Varden’s Resurrection of Chastity

The former Trappist Abbot of Mount St. Bernard’s Abbey in England and now Bishop of Trondheim in his native Norway, offers a glorious revivification of an often neglected word.

Bishop Erik Varden O.C.S.O, of the Catholic Territorial Prelature of Trondheim, Norway, at the vespers at Santa Maria dell'Anima in Rome. / Daniel Ibáñez / CNA

While Lent offers us a clear path of conversion, turning away from the world, Easter invites us into God’s own life. In Lent, we seek to die with Christ; in Easter, we must live with him. It appears an anticlimactic season after the rigors of prayer and fasting, but Lent is ordered to Easter as a period of training to live a more joyful and integrated life in Christ.

The word “chastity” might take us right back to the battle of Lent. Isn’t that one of those negative words focusing on prohibitions? The Church’s teaching, however, leads us to a positive vision focused on integrity: “Chastity means the successful integration of sexuality within the person and thus the inner unity of man in his bodily and spiritual being” (Catechism of the Catholic Church, §2337). This vision focuses more on life than death, living a truly human life that allows the interior order of the soul to God to permeate our entire being.

The word chastity, therefore, needs to be resurrected in our understanding. Bishop Erik Varden, former Trappist Abbot of Mount St. Bernard’s Abbey in England and now Bishop of Trondheim in his native Norway, offers a glorious revivification in Chastity: Reconciliation of the Senses (Bloomsbury, 2023):

To tie chastity down, as has been done, to mere mortification of the senses is to make of it a tool to sabotage the flourishing of character. It is also to misunderstand, misrepresent, and misapply the meaning of a complex notion. I hope, in this book, to release ‘chastity’ from imprisonment in too narrow categories, allowing it to stretch, extend its limbs, breathe freely, perhaps even sing. I use these images advisedly. Unless chastity has a degree of full-bloodedness, it is not a real thing, but counterfeit” (10).

We must resurrect chastity, not simply as a term, but as a source of the Lord’s risen life within us.

Varden brings delight to an area most seek to avoid, bringing light and joy into a serious conversation about inner disorder. He illuminates chastity through art, drama and literature while remaining down-to-earth. The book speaks to real human experience more than offering a scholastic treatise. Touching on this point, he explains,

That is why I am keen to ground my reflection on chastity in the narrative of a dignified substance divinely adorned, then stripped of glory, reduced to a state of confused desire, ever wanting more than earthly life can provide yet able, even among thorns, to know moments of exultant joy, proceeding homeward – whether or not one knows where home is – robed in mercy” (46).

What an elegant tribute to the work of the Resurrection to restore us to glory.

My largest takeaway from the book regards the way in which chastity fulfills our nature rather than diminish it. He continues where the last quotation left off:

Leaning on this narrative, deeply Scriptural, I will suggest that the wholeness to which a chaste ideal would lead is not contrary to nature but stands for nature’s fulfillment. It is an ideal sprung from our gracious origin and pointing towards our supernatural end. The pursuit of integrity is rarely straightforward. It can take us through momentous tensions, which we shall consider. Still, it is a vital option, an option that stands a good chance of bringing happiness. In the language of Deuteronomy, it stands for a choice of life, not death” (46-47).

Varden does not shy away from the tensions that express our often twisted search for happiness. He does not simply condemn them but looks upon them in light of the goodness of our nature and the light into which God calls us. We need to recover a sense of our identity, of what it means to be human. “We do not, in fact, know what is natural to us. Therefore, we struggle to live naturally. . . . What is natural is to be governed by the Word, and thereby to know, in God, freedom, harmony and joy” (52-53). The rejection of chastity and the integration it brings leads only to emptiness and death, not joy and life, while God’s grace restores dignity to our humanity.

The book does not shy away from challenging topics related to sexual disorders, but examines them with gracious honesty. When discussing the “dehumanizing eros” that consumes others, he explains its perversion as “‘turned away’ from its purpose. Instead of creating communion, it accentuates loneliness. That is why it must be dealt with sensitively” (98). The Christian, in overcoming distorted eros, turns to asceticism to find the freedom needed to commit to others, to see things as they really are. “Chastity enables us to live thus, attentively and reverently. It stands for a way of being alive in the world” (157).

We can choose chastity as a path to life, enlivened by the grace of the risen Christ, the one who came into the world to overcome darkness and sin so that we may embrace the fullness of life.


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About Dr. R. Jared Staudt 78 Articles
R. Jared Staudt PhD, serves as Director of Content for Exodus 90 and as an instructor for the lay division of St. John Vianney Seminary. He is author of How the Eucharist Can Save Civilization (TAN), Restoring Humanity: Essays on the Evangelization of Culture (Divine Providence Press) and The Beer Option (Angelico Press), as well as editor of Renewing Catholic Schools: How to Regain a Catholic Vision in a Secular Age (Catholic Education Press). He and his wife Anne have six children and he is a Benedictine oblate.

4 Comments

  1. “To tie chastity down, as has been done, to mere mortification of the senses is to make of it a tool to sabotage the flourishing of character” (Bishop Erik Varden). Varden is on to something intensely related to the glorification of our sensual desires enlivened by God’s grace.
    For a man a woman remains attractive whether layman or presbyter or contemplative monk. This based on personal conviction, whether it corresponds fully to Varden’s thoughts is uncertain, that the more we enter into the divinity through Christ the clearer becomes the fragrance of Christ’s love exemplified in the purity of his response to the affection lavished upon him in the Mary narratives, washing his feet with tears drying with their hair.
    Man as well as God he possesses sensual attraction suffering all that we suffer but never sins. His sensual desires are more transformed than suppressed by the purity of his love. That would seem to bring us closer to what Bishop Varden means that “the wholeness to which a chaste ideal would lead is not contrary to nature but stands for nature’s fulfillment”.

  2. For me, Bishop Varden’s book “Chastity” was priceless. I was one who had long conquered the deadly sins of masturbation and pornography. But making the final leap to full chastity had been allusive. This book was the missing link.

    May god continue to bless this holy monk as well as all who seek to break with lust and bathe in the truth and brilliance of chastity.

  3. Who would have thought that a virtue that should be proclaimed, well, say, a few thousand times in statements eminating from the Vatican, for these times, every single year, would seem like a revolutionary idea.

  4. A truly great man whose depth of intellect writing pulls at the soul to convey a message: Yes, He exists and He wants you to know that Love is real and your contribution is desired! Frankly, he is Newman for our time! Move over Barron, there’s a new kid in town, whose ability to tap into our need for God and meaning in this times makes his thoughts and answers even outstrip yours!

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