Reflections
on Isaiah 6.1-13 and Luke 5.1-11 and on the spiritual practice of solitude (for
more on solitude, see the Practicing the Way course).
The
role of the prophet has been described as to hold together fearless truth-telling
and fierce hope, naming social realities as they are and helping a society
reimagine what life together could look like instead. And it is a matter of
record in the Bible that every culture and context need such voices, calling us
to turn away from death and embrace life.
The
book of the prophet Isaiah records his call to just such a role, in an intense
vision experienced at a time of transition. Uzziah, the king, had died. His
reign had brought stability and security, but he had grown proud, had sought to
be high priest as well as king — two roles that had always been kept apart — and
had been humbled by God, forced to live in quarantine outside the city walls as
a leper. As a leper, in death he cannot even be laid to rest with his ancestors
in the royal tombs. His house is without him.
This
is the backdrop against which Isaiah sees and hears the Lord of angel armies filling
the temple, and the Master sends him to bear a message to the people. Our
English translation — “Keep listening, but do not comprehend; keep looking, but
do not understand.” — doesn’t quite convey it. The Hebrew repeats the words to
hear, and to see, in a different form (the same consonants, different vowels) to
give us something like ‘hearing piled up on hearing’ and ‘seeing piled up on seeing’
as activities that result in a dulling of awareness.
I
don’t know what that looked like for Iron Age people. But I do know what it
looks like for the first people to live in the Digital Age. I carry in my
pocket a computer far more powerful than the computers that put men on the moon.
The last time men walked on the moon was in the month after I was born, and in
my lifetime the Digital Age has changed the face of the earth and has shaped us
powerfully. Indeed, this has accelerated rapidly in my adult years.
When
I was a child, if you wanted to contact me, you might call a phone physically
connected to a wall in my home, and someone might be there to take a message.
Now we carry our phones with us. We are on call on demand all of the time. Or
you might have written a letter, and you might expect a reply within a week (or
longer, if overseas). But now we have texts and email and are shaped to seek an
immediate response. There is a lifetime of difference between waiting each day
for the postman in anticipation of a letter from a sweetheart and checking our
smartphone compulsively for work related emails or a ‘like’ on social media.
The desire for connection has become oppressive.
When
I was a child, there were three television channels. Now there are hundreds, if
not thousands. You could do nothing but watch tv and you would not scratch the
surface. When I was a child, we watched Newsround and the Six O’clock News. Now
there is a constant cycle of breaking news, designed to grip you with anxiety
from the moment you open your eyes in the morning until you lie awake worrying
at night. You can have podcasts coming out of your ears. You can have a
presence on multiple social media platforms, and stay up playing online multiplayer
video games, hunting and hiding, shooting and running too fast to be shot.
It
isn’t just Digital. We are shaped by other forms of technology too. I live on
the intersection of three roads, and with the constant noise of traffic. And
that noise, and that speed, shapes us in a particular way, over time. It shapes
us into more anxious and more impatient people.
I’m
not anti-technology, not by any means. But we need to be reminded that it isn’t
neutral, that it shapes us, that it deforms us in many ways, and that we need a
counter movement in our lives.
Isaiah
wants to know, how long will this flood of sights and sounds, these
distractions that dull our senses, last? And the Lord replies, until the land
is utterly desolate and vast is the emptiness in the midst of the land.
And
for Isaiah’s first Iron Age audience this pointed to exile, as an event in
which the land would be liberated from human folly and allowed to rest and
recover for seventy years. Perhaps that is what the earth needs again now.
But
for those who, down the centuries, have been known by their contemporaries and
by generations who came after as teachers of life, as saints, as women and men
of noteworthy wisdom and holiness, as role models in the spiritual life, all
recognise this empty place as an invitation to experience intimacy with God.
Because
we are all deformed by the sights and sounds that fill the world, by the
constant attrition that dulls us so that the beauty and wonder of the world
becomes passé, and that is only getting more and more relentless. And if,
instead, we are to be formed into more peaceful, more loving, more secure and
whole people, we need to counteract those forces by embracing the practice of
solitude.
Solitude
is not the same thing as being alone. Some of us spend much of our week alone,
and community is an essential human need. But so is solitude, which is the
intentional choice of being alone with God. Of getting away from distractions,
to spend time with God. Of getting away from distractions, to come face to face
with ourselves, and to see ourselves not as something we deep down dislike but
through God’s eyes, the eyes of the loving creator, redeemer and sustainer of
our being, our body and soul.
In
the Digital Age, this is an act of resistance. An act of holy rebellion. And it
is hard, especially if you aren’t aware of other people doing likewise.
In
Luke 6 we read an account of the call of Simon Peter to follow Jesus. To be
with Jesus and become like Jesus, and — in a mystery we cannot fathom but can
only enter into or resist — to become more fully the person the Lord had
created Simon Peter to be. That is always the invitation: to be with Jesus, and
in being with Jesus, in becoming more like him, to become, over time, more
fully us. To be set free from all that deforms the glory of God in us.
And
Jesus, as Simon Peter will soon discover, made a habit of retreating to quiet
places to be with God. A daily habit, that sustained him in being present for
others without being consumed by their demands.
Luke’s
account begins with Simon and Jesus in the boat, together. Jesus tells Simon to
head out into the deep, away from the crowd. Simon had been out there all night
and found it empty. But this time, he heads out with Jesus, and discovers that
it is full, full of fish, so full he can hardly contain it, and this draws him
back into community, at a deeper level. This is how solitude differs from loneliness
— which is desolate — or isolation — which is cut off from community.
But
first, this solitude, this being alone with God — with Jesus — in the quiet
place, provokes a necessary crisis. Simon is confronted with his sinfulness,
his awareness of his inadequacy in the presence of God — and it is terrifying.
Yet it is precisely here that Jesus speaks peace to his deepest fears and
extends an invitation to follow him. Jesus extends the same invitation to us
today. How will we respond?
One
of the things I try to do is keep my phone on silent, and left on the side, on
my day off. One day a week when I resist the distractions it offers. No social
media — though it is desperately addictive, and I often fall to the temptation.
And there are other times during the week that I turn it off and put it away.
It
is worth working through your day, and noting where the noise comes from,
externally — the radio, the television, the traffic — and internally — the
repetitive anxieties or rehearsed arguments — and also the empty places where
you go looking for God — a favourite chair in the house, a favourite walk. The
point is not to eliminate sights and sounds and lay our lives to waste, but to
identify quiet space in our days where we might simply be with God, not filling
the emptiness with our prayers but simple being in one another’s presence, God
and you, and resting in love.
The
more sights and sounds there are in our lives, the greater our need for such counter-formational
solitude.
And
this is something where the older generations, who grew up before the Digital
Age began, may have something deeply important to offer the younger
generations, the digital natives. But only if we ourselves have become at home
in the empty spaces and not just left behind by the centres of civilisation.
So,
what have you learnt about meeting God in stillness and silence? What patterns
have you build into your daily routine to seek God? These are not rhetorical
questions. We need to pool our wisdom, for the sake of our community, for the
people of this parish.
If
you have found patterns or practices that help you meet God in this way, do
share them. If you have found them helpful, there’s a good chance that others
would too. And if you struggle to find God in the busyness and distractions of
life, know that you are not alone.
May
we know grace to seek and find the Lord in solitude and find healing and
wholeness in him. Amen.