“. . .search your hearts and be silent.”
Flannery O’Connor, I remember reading, one of the finest and
most well-known writers of the 20th century, was almost totally
inconspicuous in her classes at Iowa Writers Workshop. I believe it. Every year
I taught, I had a few silent types that knocked my socks off when they handed
in an essay. Teachers love talkers, but
classrooms that sound morgue-ish doesn’t necessarily mean that the minds that
inhabit it are laid out cold.
Generalizations are always hazardous, but, historically at
least, the annals of the American West are rife with stories about white
folks—immigrant farmers, cavalry lieutenants, even French trappers—who grew
awfully uncomfortable with the silence Native folks felt imperative before a
discussion. Then again, the history of the West wouldn’t be as jaded if white
folks had kept their mouths shut a whole lot smore than they did.
Given our politically-charged media culture’s incessant
yapping, it’s probably understandable why some people would opt out and seek
the enforced silence of the monastery. Just this week, a good friend told me
he’s been spending time with the Benedictines at a monastery not all that far
from here. Thomas Merton and Henry Nouwen have wide and devoted readership;
it’s difficult to know whether, a couple decades ago, Kathleen Norris’s Cloister
Walk begat a phenomenon or merely rode the wave. To many—and to me—silence often
looks good, probably because it’s hard to come by.
I stopped at Mulberry Point all by lonesome on Thursday
because I knew that the overview of the Missouri River right there, a magnificent
panorama, simply takes your breath away—and the words that come along.
Sometimes silence says everything we really need to hear.
I’ve become familiar with old folks’ homes. My mother was in
one for a long time; we visit my wife’s father every Sunday afternoon. I’m
sitting in one right now. Silence often pervades those places, no matter how
cheerfully they’re decorated. I suppose the silence in those homes doesn’t make
life there any more moral or high-toned.
But here in Psalm 4, it’s a command. In this 12-step therapy
regimen David is creating in this psalm, he raises a finger and says, simply, “Listen!
Just be quiet.
He means me. Be still, he says. And here I am on this Sunday
morning, going on and on.
Be still, David says.
Just, be still.
Lord, help me.
2 comments:
A quiet Amen to that.
Yes. We all need these times of reflection. Thanks, Jim. CK
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