What is the prayer of silence? It can be as simple, says a Salesian priest, in a recent issue of Bible & Life, as what occurred to him while visiting the birthplace of St. Francis de Sales: being awe-struck by the beauty of the alps and the snow-capped mountains. Because of this experience he is not surprised at the Saint's dispositions for the spiritual life. We are very much affected, he says, by our environment.
We
are often brought to silence, he says, when we find that no words can
adequately give voice to the beauties of creation. One of highest
manifestations of
the beauty of creation is humanity, he goes on to say. The actions of people often surprise him by how well they express the love and beauty at the core of existence. This keeps him motivated, he says,
and in the throes of hell-like problems helps him to respond with a hearty laugh. And when seeing the happiness of another human being, spontaneously joyful from life itself, he also feels energized by the same joyful presence.
This
experience is similar, he says, to our deepening relationship of love
with God. When our love of God deepens and grows, the words we use in prayer decrease. Within silence, having put aside our worldly concerns, we are content to be in his presence, alone, just as our predecessors in the faith did before us, discovering that the best response to God's love is often a silent listening. Though praying fluently
and freely is thought to be a sign of one who prays well, and that
praying by using different prayers is a sign of a prayerful person, this
is a misunderstanding of prayer. Without silence, he says, as the
background for our prayer life, our words will be an obstacle to true prayer.
When we reflect on the love of God for us, the thoughts themselves are prayer. To reflect on this and the graces received, our whole being becomes a silent, prayerful response.
He recalls several New Testament accounts of this kind
of silent prayer. Mary Magdalena, according to the Gospel writers, had seven
devils which were driven out by Jesus. She was not the kind of person that would have friends, and she must have suffered much with
her condition. But meeting Jesus her whole life changed; she became a new person. In a moment, her pain and grief disappeared, replaced by joy. The only thing that interested her now was to be with Jesus,
hear his words, and to live them.
Other examples were St. Joseph and Mary. And though Joseph obviously was a great influence, along with Mary, in the life of Jesus, a great deal of silence
surrounds him in the Scriptures. He was clearly a person whose whole
life was a life of silence in obedience. Like Mary, there were many
things he did not understand, but he obeyed: marrying Mary, seeking
refuge in Egypt, and returning to Israel. Mary's silence is referred to
as: "[she] treasured all these things and reflected on them in her heart."
When
resting in silence, the foundation of all prayer, we are able to hear
the sounds coming to us from all sides: the sounds of nature, our
brothers' pleas, the sounds from God, and the sounds coming from inside
ourselves. From silence comes our spiritual life. Within this silence--as scripture counsels "Be still and know that I am God"--we come in contact with God. And in this silence, if sufficiently still, dying to all we believe ourselves to be, we are brought to a grateful appreciation of the life we have been given, and to an all-encompassing love for the source of that life.