Note:
includes discussion of suicide.
Lectionary
readings for Holy Communion today: Jeremiah 7.23-28 and Luke 11.14-23.
I
have been thinking about silence of late. Silence, and listening. One of the
things God says, repeatedly, through the prophets, is that the people don’t
listen to him, when God cries out in the voice of the poor and those weighed
down by heavy burdens. The more the world changes, the more it stays the same.
In our age, we are trained, by social media—surely Orwellian double speak—to
listen to shout down with counter-argument, rather than to understand another’s
experience and meet them with compassion.
There
is a silence that leads to life, and a silence that leads to death; and we must
discern one from the other.
Here
at St Nicholas’ Church this Lent, some of us have been sitting together in
shared silence. This is a profound experience. I spend some hours every day
alone at my desk, with no radio or music in the background. But this is not
silence. Inside my head there is a running commentary, on what I am doing, on
what I need to do next, and after that. Shared silence is a discipline of
allowing the internal noise to be stilled, the mind to come to rest. Sitting
with others in 20 minutes of shared silence on Tuesday night, I realised that
my mind does not know how to rest. I understand the theological importance of
rest; I gift rest to my body; but my mind does not know how to enter into rest.
My mind is not a machine, that can be turned off and later on again. My mind is
a creature—God’s good creation—that is stuck in a trauma response—for me that
is to freeze, in hope that if I stay very still, the danger I sense will go
away. But a frozen mind is not a mind at rest; it is a mind at constant high
alert.
Shared
silence is a discipline, a posture that opens us to the possibility of
encountering God; and encountering, more deeply, others; and encountering, more
truthfully, ourselves. Shared silence invites us to let go of the false self,
the barriers we construct between us and others, which, eventually, come
between us and the self we fear to acknowledge, because we cannot gaze upon
ourselves with the depth of love with which God gazes upon us.
There
is a silence that leads to life, and a silence that leads to death. Some days
ago, a local teenage boy completed suicide in the park across the intersection
from the church. His friends and classmates and their wider peer group have
gathered where he died each day since, at the end of the school day, in small
groups, leaving flowers and lighting candles. I have been deeply impressed by
how they are caring for one another. And a recurring theme in the cards they
have left is, we wish you had felt able to speak up; we would have supported
you.
We
wish you had felt able to speak up.
The
silence we freely choose leads to life. The silence that feels imposed upon us,
by the world around us, the shape of society, by an exercising of control we
might even call demonic, leads to death. In some cases, tragically, in a
literal sense.
The
perhaps counterintuitive thing is that shared silence may help us to listen
more attentively, carefully, compassionately, when another person does speak
up. Because we have disciplined ourselves not to cut them up, not to speak over
them.
As
the local church, we need to hold safe space for shared silence—safe space,
because to enter into silence, letting go of the noise that distracts us, is a
deeply vulnerable posture. And we need to hold safe space for being listened
to, where people can find a voice to say, ‘This is what I am burdened with
right now.’
Our
young people need such safe spaces, as do our senior citizens, and anyone in
between. Spaces where we might experience the freedom that God, who has made
himself known to us in the face of Jesus Christ, longs for us to know.
I
have been thinking about silence of late. Silence, and listening.
