By Richard Rohr
Finding God in the Depths of Silence Real interior silence, not just the absence of noise, is a foundational spiritual discipline. So why are we so resistant to enter into it? When I first began to write this article, I thought to myself, “How do you promote something as vaporous as silence? It will be like a poem about air!” But finally I began to trust my limited experience, which is all that any of us have anyway. I do know that my best writings and teachings have not come from thinking but, as Malcolm Gladwell writes in Blink, much more from not thinking. Only then does an idea clarify and deepen for me. Yes, I need to think and study beforehand, and afterward try to formulate my thoughts. But my best teachings by far have come in and through moments of interior silence—and in the “non-thinking” of actively giving a
Photo by Shoshannah White
sermon or presentation. Aldous Huxley described it perfectly for me in a lecture he gave in 1955 titled “Who Are We?” There he said, “I think we have to prepare the mind in one way or another to accept the great uprush or downrush, whichever you like to call it, of the greater nonself.” That precise language might be off-putting to some, but it is a quite accurate way to describe the very common experience of inspiration and guidance.
16 sojourners march 2013
march 2013 sojourners 17