A Catholic priest and convert from Anglicanism, Ronald Knox was one of the most famous preachers in England in the decades surrounding the Second World War. Quite the eccentric, Knoxโs linguistic brilliancy manifested itself from his earliest years when, as a middle schooler, he was writing serial stories for a Latin newspaper he created with his siblings. Schooled at Eton and Balliol, Knox converted to Catholicism from the ranks of the Anglican clergy in 1917 and was quickly ordained to the Catholic priesthood: he eventually went on to create the โKnox Bibleโ, an entirely new translation with the distinctive flair of semi-archaic and unusual wording.
Throughout his life, Knox was in high demand as a preacher. Once he got tired of re-using a sermon for the same occasion (graduations, weddings, etc), he would publish it and take it out of circulation. One such collection is Bridegroom and Bride, a slim volume of wedding homilies recently republished by Cluny Media, which has republished a number of his books. A pithy and wise book, Knoxโs homiletic admonitions to newlyweds form a small treasury whence insights โboth new and oldโ can be drawn.
Like his close friend Hubert van Zeller (another of my favorite authors), Knox writes that true romantic love is a matter of โgive and giveโ, not โgive and takeโ: โThe cynic will tell you that married happiness is a matter of give and take. Do not believe him; it is a matter of give and give.โ The bride and groom โminister the sacrament to one another, not so much by acceptingโ the gift of the other so much as by โstanding there in silence and making, each in turn, the gift that is being accepted.โ
Knox waxes lyrical on the symbolism of the ring in several lovely passages: โYou two have accepted that Christian duty, within the narrow circle of which the wedding ring is the symbol.โ
Here is another beautiful statement of how marriage reflects the nature of God in man: God is a communion of persons, and to be โin Godโs imageโ is to be ordered to a communion of persons as well.
Because we wear Godโs image, it is not natural for man to be alone; it is natural that man should say to woman, โI thee wed, I thee worship, I thee endow, in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost, Amen.โ
Though there is a vocation to celibacy within Christianity, nonetheless โit is natural for man or woman to look out on a world-picture framed in a human companionship; we see better, donโt we, with two eyes than with one?โ
This natural attraction is rightly felt on several levels:
Just as you cannot say with confidence, โHere body ends and soul begins,โ you cannot say with confidence, speaking of two lovers, โHere was a physical, and here was a spiritual attraction.โ The two threads are intertwined.
This basis in nature is elevated, not supplanted by the grace of the sacrament. โGrace,โ writes Knox, โis not something that comes in from the outside, and says, โNo, you are doing it wrong, let me show you how to do it.โโ Rather, โit perfects nature, transmutes something that belongs to earth and makes it glow with the radiance of heaven.โ The love felt โis already something sacramental,โ โraw materialโ which is โwaiting for the divine action to polish it.โ How reassuring for Knox to tell us that โDivine and human love are not strangers to one another, are not forces pulling in different directions.โ As Knoxโs confessor and close friend Dom Hubert says in We Live With Our Eyes Open:
Bring God to love? But He is already there. God is love; human love is simply one side of it stretching out to the other. Human love is meant to tell us something of Divine love. This is primarily what it is for. To get the love of God right, we have only to learn the lesson from human love.
Bridegroom and Bride is not a theological treatise on marriage. It is not a self-help book. It is a set of simple meditations, short vignettes on different aspects of Christian romance and the ceremonies that ratify it and make it a sacrament. Thought provoking without being an intellectual tour-de-force, Knox reminds us of โcommonplace truths,โ which โbecause of our human frailtyโ often obscured. First and foremost, it is a reminder that romantic love is part of Godโs plan for humanity, and that He intends to support, increase, and beautify it through the sacrament of marriage. โYour love grow less?โ asks Knox. โNot while it is fed by the power that multiplied the loaves, and turned water into wine. Incarnate Christ does not fail to take all that is most human in us and divinize it.โ
Image: The Espousal of the Virgin by Jean-Baptiste Wicar
