This is an important book that needed to be written. It is the antithesis to the one-sided premise of The Benedict Option. It’s also a hospitable place for people (like me) who enjoy abstract, philosophical thinking made less airy by well-reasoned metaphor. I found this book's ideas amiable to hang out with— listening, reflecting, making connections, and stretching my intellect.
In my opinion no book should be expected to please everyone, and this one won't. This is not an easy read, and it doesn’t provide formulaic answers to life’s problems. The author reminds us that rigid formulas are a problem when humans attempt to use them to define THE RIGHT WAY for all humans to live.
Intellectually, Patrick Henry’s writing is elegant and exceptionally satisfying. It coheres seamlessly, gracefully. That's an accomplishment. I rarely experience the pleasure of gliding through a series of complex ideas--I generally have to work to grasp them. But when reading this book, I felt like I was being carried from thought to thought by a fair breeze. It felt like Benedictine hospitality in action. I appreciated not having to struggle against a head wind (using the sailing metaphor, I didn't have to keep adjusting my sails to tack this way and that) to get where the author wanted me to arrive.
In this voice, I sensed an authentic humility which I rarely find in academic writing. I tend to get rigid and defensive inside when I feel like I’m being preached at or talked down to by a white male. But this is a book I will reread and reflect on. I will use Patrick Henry’s words as a springboard for deeper exploration. I’ll choose to spend time with this new-friend of a book because it resonates with me, and it’s important to me—to my own writing, creative process, and to opening my heart wider to living a Benedictine way of life.
YOU PROBABLY WILL NOT LIKE THIS BOOK IF: abstract concepts and poetic metaphors are not your thing; you have never met a Benedictine monastic and know nothing at all about Benedictine spirituality (there are other books that will serve better as an entrance into your exploration--I recommend How to Live by Judith Valente and Staying Put, Listening Well, Being Changed By God: Benedictine promises for everyday people by Rachel M. Srubas); you have read The Benedict Option by Rod Dreher and you're completely convinced he is perfectly right, leaving no room in your already-made-up mind for discussion about where Dreher might be misguided or under-informed about the complex history of Benedict, Scholastica, and their 15 centuries of followers.
YOU PROBABLY WILL LIKE THIS BOOK IF: you are interested in contemplating the experimental, rhythmical, communal, ecumenical, and narrational patterns of the Benedictine charism; you believe that spirituality is more beautiful and meaningful when we use it as a kaleidoscope, not a formula; and/or you are a fan of the writings of Kathleen Norris and/or Thomas Merton.
For the audience for whom it was written, Benedictine Options is an important, delightful book.