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The Power of Silence Scripture Lesson: 1 Samuel 3:110 I want to talk with you this morning about the power of silence. First, a story: there was a remote monastery deep in the woods where the monks followed a rigid vow of silence. This vow could only be broken once a year on Christmas, by one monk, and the monk was permitted to speak only one sentence. One Christmas, Brother Andrew had his turn to speak and said, I love the delightful mashed potatoes we have every year with the Christmas roast beef! Then he sat down. Silence ensued for 365 days. The next Christmas, Brother Michael got his turn, and said, I think the mashed potatoes are lumpy and I truly despise them! Once again, silence ensued for 365 days. The following Christmas, Brother Thomas stood up and said, I am fed up with this constant bickering! This is a humorous story, but the truth is its all the funnier to us because our society cannot imagine being in a community where silence is such an integral part of life together. Noise and activity have become the symbols for us of the good life, and filling up empty time as much as possible has become a gauge for how well one is doing. Cell phones, ipods, MP3s, mini-TVs, radios and boom boxes have all helped to crowd out opportunities for quiet time in our society. While technology has increased our opportunities for busyness, the problem is that human beings have decreased their capacity for being still. The Bible doesnt say Get busy, so that you can know the Lord, but rather in Psalm 46, Be still, and know that I am God. The lack of God-knowledge is an age old problem. The first scripture lesson read this morning from the third chapter of the first book of Samuel, describes events that occurred in the Holy Land 1,100 years before the birth of Christ. It was a time when the Lord God appeared to have abandoned the people. The chapter begins with the statement that Gods word was rare in those days, and visions were not widespread. Does this mean that God stopped speaking, or stopped trying to communicate with people? No, it seems rather that the people at that time in their history had slowly lost the ability to hear God speaking. Prophets, or Gods spokesmen, were no longer being heard, and eventually stopped speaking. The political leadership was ineffective. The religious leadership also was corrupt, and those who should have known betterthe sons of the prophet Elido not share his devotion to the Lord, and they are known for their wickedness and total lack of regard for the Lord. Things had reached a low point in spiritual growth and development. And that brings us to the boy Samuel. Samuel was ministering to the Lord under Elis guidance, who nurtured him into the faith. One evening Samuel was lying down in the temple of the Lord. which many interpret to mean that he was sleeping, but so often in the Scriptures when God gives messages to people and it is reported that they are sleeping, it could be that they were simply resting as in a period of deep contemplative prayer, or resting in God. In this resting, Samuel hears a voice saying, Samuel! Samuel! Supposing that his mentor was calling him, he ran to Eli and said, Here I am, for you called me. But Eli replied, I did not call you; go lie down again. Apparently, Samuel had heard the voice correctly, but he did not know the source of the voice. Being untrained in how to listen for the word of God, he could hear but he could not understand. Twice more he heard the call Samuel! Samuel! running each time to Eli. Finally the prophet perceived that it was the Lord who was calling the boy, and he directed Samuel to respond the next time with, Speak, Lord, for your servant is listening. The story tells us two things. First, it reminds us of the importance of discernment. Hearing voices is always a tricky thing when it comes to religion. History, sadly, provides us with too many examples of well-meaning men and women, hungry for a profound spiritual experience and intimacy with God, hearing messages that they honestly believe is from God, and who once acting upon them, cause great damage to themselves, their families or to society at large. The lesson we learn from Samuel is that when he heard a voice calling out to him, he had the presence of mind to check out his experience with a true guide, his elder mentor, the prophet Eli, who in his experienced wisdom could guide young Samuel into how to interpret the words he was hearing. So please, if you believe that you are hearing voices from God, you mustmustgo to a wise spiritual elder who can help you discern if it is a word from the Lord, or your own psyche telling you things you really want to hear and to do and needing divine backing for. Second, the biblical witness today tells us something about how God comes to us. Rarely is God revealed to us in dramatic ways, with thunderous pronouncements that are clear and obvious to us and everybody around us. Much more often, it is in the silence that God comes, in the stillness of the night when we have let go of the cacophony of the worlds messages that we have gotten so used to hearing during the course of the day. The Scriptures contain many examples of this; in addition to the boy Samuel in todays lesson, it is in the silence of the cloud that God comes to Moses in Exodus 24; it is in the still small voiceor as newer translations have itthe sound of sheer silence that God comes to Elijah in I Kings 19; it is in the cloud on the Mount of Transfiguration in Mark 9 that the voice of God says in effect to Jesus disciples to be quiet, for This is my Son, my Beloved; listen to him! As the poetry of Psalm 62 puts it: For God alone my soul in silence waits; my hope is in him. So, what does this mean for you? Are you waiting for God this morning? Are you longing for the pure loving and gracious presence that is waiting to be born in you? Perhaps you have found yourself feeling like St. Augustine when he prayed: O Lord my God, teach my heart where and how to seek You, where and how to find You. You are everywhere, so You must be here. You have created and re-created me, and all the good I have comes from You, and still I do not know You...Let me seek You by desiring You, and desire You by seeking You. Let me find You by loving You, and love You in finding You. If you are seeking God this morning, and you want to communicate with God at the deepest level, then know that the vehicle for establishing this close relationship with God is through silence. The basic language of God, as St. John of the Cross said, is silence. And it is only in silence that we hear it. The Word of God cannot be heard in the noisy world of today, any more than it could be heard in the noisy and wicked age referred to in todays Old Testament lesson. If you can build more silence into your daily living, you just might hear God calling you to do extraordinary things with your life. It certainly was true for one man whom we are honoring today and tomorrow. This holiday weekend our nation remembers the life and legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. It is also a very special time for this Cathedral for it is from this pulpit that Dr. King preached his last Sunday sermon. Kings public witness and ministry is well-known to people all over the world, but not many know the extent to which King relied on prayer to sustain him throughout his public life. Late one night at a scary and dangerous time for him and his family in the midst of the Montgomery bus boycott in January of 1956, Martin felt that he was at the end of his rope. Having received yet another threatening phone call promising a swift and violent end to his and his familys lives, King realized that he couldnt take it any more, and that he desperately wanted a way out of taking leadership in the growing movement for civil rights. Stephen Oates, in his book Let the Trumpet Sound (p. 85) writes of that fateful evening: He sat there, his head still bowed in his hands, tears burning his eyes. But then he felt somethinga presence, a stirring in himself. And it seemed that an inner voice was speaking to him with quiet assurance: Martin Luther, stand up for righteousness. Stand up for justice. Stand up for truth. And, lo, I will be with you, even unto the end of the world...It was the voice of Jesus telling him still to fight on. And he promised never to leave me, never to leave me alone. No, never alone...He promised never to leave me, never to leave me alone... He raised his head. He felt stronger now. He could face the morrow. Whatever happened, God in His wisdom meant it to be. Kings trembling stopped, and he felt an inner calm he had never experienced before. He realized that I can stand up without fear. I can face anything. And for the first time God was profoundly real and personal to him...no longer some metaphysical category he found philosophically satisfying. No, God was very close to him now, a living God who could transform the fatigue of despair into the buoyancy of hope and who would never, ever, leave him alone. God called and sustained Martin in what he had to do, and God is also calling you. Let us now be silent for a minute before we continue with the liturgy; I invite you in these moments of silence to open your heart and mind to God, so that you may hear. Amen. Softly and tenderly Jesus is calling, calling for you and for me; |