The Spiritual Practice of Silence: (Joe Colletti, PHD)
The Spiritual Practice of Silence: (Joe Colletti, PHD)
The Spiritual Practice of Silence: (Joe Colletti, PHD)
The Christian scriptures also encourage silence. “Be still and know that I am
God (Ps 46.10)” is a powerful verse when we understand these words as
being personally spoken to us by God. “Listen to me in silence (Isa 41.1)” is
another such verse as well as “Be still before the Lord (Ps 37.7). We can
respond be saying “It is good to sit alone in silence when the Lord has
imposed it (Lam.3.27-28)” or by saying “For God alone my soul waits (Ps
62.1)” or “I wait for the Lord, my soul waits (Ps 130.5)” as a way of heeding
to God’s encouragement to be silent.
Our religious experiences have also understood silence within a context of,
and a relationship to, sound. One ancient religious saying notes God as
saying to humans “You will never be able to hear my words if you cannot
hear my silence.” Within the context of worship, congregational members
are often asked to be silent between prayers and songs and to reflect on
what was just voiced. In Quakerism, silence is understood as an actual part
of worship services and a time to allow the spirit to speak in the heart and
mind of participants. Thus, silence and sound are intertwined—sound brings
silence and silence brings sound.
Within the context of integrating our urban experiences and our spiritual
lives, not all sounds are pleasant. Our urban world can be filled with
unpleasant and terrible personal incidents, community-wide events, and
national tragedies. These are times when the spiritual practice of silence can
be very effective. Such times can be initiated by you and just for you or by
others and meant for you to join in with others. Either way, they are times
not to be ignored or avoided but seen as times to be used to integrate our
urban experiences and our spiritual lives with or without others and either
within a private or public setting.
The folk musician Paul Simon of Simon and Garfunkel wrote the song “The
Sounds of Silence” in the aftermath of the assassination of President John F.
Kennedy on November 22, 1963. His intent was to capture the emotional
trauma felt by many of the country’s residents through the lyrics of the
song. The opening words are as follows:
These words and other words from songs that he has written lead Time
Magazine to call him one of the "100 people who shape our world" in 2006.
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about various things about ourselves. All of a sudden, we are unable to
remain silent and feel attentive towards God because these very thoughts
become distractions.
Breaking our silence and crying out to God in intercessory prayer may seem
like an easy and desirable task. However, hearing the hurts and pains of the
world may cause us to distract ourselves before we begin intercessory
prayer out of our silence. We start thinking about seemingly trivial things
and as a result avoid getting in touch with the hurts and pains of others.
Also, we will eventually get in touch with our own hurts and pains by
allowing ourselves to experience the hurts and pains of others. Therefore,
while distracting ourselves while silent, we divert ourselves away from the
hurts and pains of others as well as our own.
We should remember that the more and more silent we become the deeper
and deeper we are able to go into ourselves. Ordinarily we do not enter such
depths because we feel less and less in control as we journey further and
further inward. As a result, too much silence may frighten us because being
in the midst of such immense silence opens us to hearing the silence of God
unlike ever before which includes hearing the hurts and pains of the world.
William Johston, in his book on Christian Mysticism, wrote
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monsters of the human race. I meet the root causes of war,
oppression, torture, hunger, terrorism. I meet hatred, despair,
injustice, atheism, darkness, I meet archetypal evil. And,
horror of horrors, I meet it in myself. In myself you say, how
can that be? How can I be responsible for war, hunger,
homelessness, hatred and despair. Alas, we our all
responsible. For we all share in the collective acts of the
human family. We are not isolated individuals but members of
a living and conscious body."
Conclusion