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David Steindl-Rast - The Way of Silence: Engaging the Sacred in Daily Life

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David Steindl-Rast The Way of Silence: Engaging the Sacred in Daily Life
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The Way of Silence draws heavily on Buddhist teachings to cultivate the practice of deep listening: turning away from noise and distraction, paying attention, and embracing quiet. The Way of Silence embraces paradox: absence versus presence in silence. Dynamic tranquility. The all-oneness of aloneness. Humbly, trusting in God, youll practice emptying your mind in order to receive wisdom, insight, and understanding. Youll learn to listen deeply, with a trusting heartand youll joyously discover a new, interior freedom that will make you feel more vibrant, and more fully alive.

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Table of Contents

Scripture passages have been taken from New Revised Standard Version Bible, copyright 1989 by the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the U.S.A., and used by permission. All rights reserved.

Extracts in chapters six and seven from A Listening Heart: The Spirituality of Sacred Sensuousness by Brother David Steindl-Rast, rev. ed., 1999, are used with permission of The Crossroad Publishing Company, www.crossroadpublishing.com. All rights reserved.

Some texts in this work originally appeared in the following

periodicals: Integral Yoga, Praying, Epiphany, The Quest, Warm Wind

The Chinook Learning Community Journal, and ReVision: The Journal of

Consciousness and Change.

Cover and book design by Mark Sullivan

Cover image Len dela Cruz | unsplash.com

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Names: Steindl-Rast, David, author.Title: The way of silence : engaging the sacred in daily life / Brother David Steindl-Rast.Description: Cincinnati : Franciscan Media, 2016.Identifiers: LCCN 2016002483 | ISBN 9781632530165Subjects: LCSH: Spiritual lifeCatholic Church. | SilenceReligious aspectsCatholic Church. | Spiritual lifeBuddhism.Classification: LCC BX2350.3 .S745 2016 | DDC 248.4/82dc23LC record available at http://lccn.loc.gov/2016002483

Print ISBN 978-1-63253-016-5

Ebook ISBN 978-1-63253-017-2

Copyright 2016, David Steindl-Rast. All rights reserved.

Published by Franciscan Media

28 W. Liberty St.

Cincinnati, OH 45202

www.FranciscanMedia.org

Contents

Chapter One

Learning to Pray in Silence

Chapter Two

The Homing Instinct of the Human Heart

Chapter Three

The Mystic in All of Us

Chapter Four

Alive in Body, Mind, and Spirit

Chapter Five

Encountering God through the Senses

Chapter Six

Cultivating Grateful Joy

Chapter Seven

Attuned to the Dynamic Order of Love

Chapter Eight

Standing on Holy Ground

Chapter Nine

Our Quest for Ultimate Meaning

Chapter Ten

The Mystical Core of Organized Religion

Meditation

One Is the Human Spirit

Sources

Chapter One: Learning to Pray in Silence

There is a negative meaning to silence and a positive one. Negatively, silence means the absence of sound or word. In these pages we focus on its positive meaning. Silence is the matrix from which word is born, the home to which word returns through understanding.... For those who know only the world of words, silence is mere emptiness. But our silent heart knows the paradox: the emptiness of silence is inexhaustibly rich; all the words in the world are merely a trickle of its fullness.

From Gratefulness, the Heart of Prayer

M y earliest recollection of formal prayer is this: My grandmother, rosary in hand, resting on her bed after our noonday meal, would let the beads glide through her fingers, silently moving her lips.

When I remember how large her bed loomed from my perspective, I realize I must have still been small. Yet when I asked her to teach me this mysterious game, she did. The stories behind the fifteen mysteries as my grandmother told them to me stayed in my mind and grew in my heart. Like seedlings taking root in good soil, they kept growing and sending out runners. To this day, like an old strawberry patch, they keep bearing fruit.

Some thirty years later, on a different continent, my grandmother was again resting on her bed and I was kneeling next to her; this time, she was dying. My mother also knelt by her mothers deathbed, and together the two of us were reciting from the English breviary the prayers for the dying. Grandmother was in a coma, but she seemed restless. She would raise her left hand a little and let it fall back on the bed, again and again. We could hear the tinkling of the silver rosary wrapped around her wrist. Finally, we caught on. We stopped the psalms and started the sorrowful mysteries of the rosary.

My Son came with His apostles to the Mount of Olives. There was a garden there that He frequently went to pray: He felt a sadness; a deep, deep sadness. He felt lonely: my Son in His humanity felt a deeper sadness than anyone could ever feel because He was pure of heart: He was sinless. He took His closest friends, Peter whom He was to give charge of the Church, James, and John. John was the one who was going to take care of me after Jesus had risen from the dead. Jesus said to them: My heart is sorrowful to the point of death: stay here and pray and keep watch while I go and pray by Myself. Jesus went over further to pray: He wanted to pray by Himself. He wanted to pour out His heart to His Father.

At its familiar phrases, grandmother relaxed, and when we came to the mystery of Christs death on the cross, she peacefully gave her life-breath back to God.

Another childhood memory of mine is connected with the Angelus prayer. All over my native Austria, the chorus of Angelus bells rises from every church steeple at dawn, at high noon, and again before dark in the evening. At school one day when I was in first grade, I stood by an open window on the top floor looking down on what you might call the campus, for ours was a big, beautiful school built by the Christian Brothers. It was noon. Classes had just finished, and children and teachers streamed out onto the courts and walkways. From so high up, the sight reminded me of an anthill on a hot summer day. Just then, the Angelus bell rang out from the church, and at once, all those busy feet down there stood still. The angel of the Lord brought the message to Mary. We had been taught to recite this prayer in silence. Then, the ringing slowed down; one last stroke of a bell and the anthill began swarming again.

Now, so many years later, I still keep that moment of silence at noon. Bells or no bells, I pray the Angelus. I let the silence drop like a pebble into the middle of my day and send its ripples out over its surface in ever-widening circles. That is the Angelus for me: the now of eternity rippling through time.

Hail Mary, full of grace,

The Lord is with Thee;

Blessed art thou among women,

And blessed is the fruit of thy womb, Jesus.

Holy Mary, Mother of God,

Pray for us sinners,

Now and at the hour of our death. Amen.

Id like to recount one more memory here, the memory of my first encounter with the Jesus Prayer, the Prayer of the Heart, as it is also called. By then, I was older but still a child; twelve, maybe. I was sitting with my mother in our doctors waiting room, resting my right hand first on one knee, then on the other, then on the armrest of my chair, then on the sill of a window from which I could see only a high hedge and some spider webs. My hand was heavily bandaged, and I had come to have the doctor change those bandages. After I had examined for some time a jar full of live leeches, which country doctors at that time still kept for bloodletting, there wasnt anything else in the bare room to keep me entertained, and I was growing fidgety.

Then my mother said something that surprised me: Russian people know the secret of never getting bored. The Olympic Games were my only association with Russians, but if there was a secret method for overcoming boredom, I needed to learn it as soon as possible. Only years later, when I came across the anonymously written classic of Eastern Orthodoxy, The Way of a Pilgrim , did I understand my mothers mysterious reference, for that book was a translation from the Russian.

Lord Jesus Christ, have mercy on me, a sinner.

The Way of a Pilgrim did tell me at length about that secret of never getting bored, but my mother had managed to summarize it so simply that it made even more sense to a boy of twelve: You need only repeat the name of Jesus over and over with every breath. Thats all. The name of Jesus will remind you of so many good stories that you will never find the time long. I tried it and it works.

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