Monday, August 15, 2005


Sundays Are Too Full


Words that do not carry
the light of Christ only increase the darkness.

Sunday morning services serve as space-less places. We fill them up with songs and sermons and passings of the offering plate (with background music, of course). What we really need is silence — space to listen. Why are we afraid?

Maybe it is because the openness of unprogrammed worship — in paring away the outside noise — leaves us no choice but to face the noise within: hypocrisy, phoniness, the false self we project (a fragile image).

Maybe it is because such silence seems a waste of time. We cannot exploit the silence: use it to turn a profit, make a product or persuade.

Maybe it is because we are a shallow people. It is harder to be in silence than to not be in noise. Frantic streams of words cover our spiritual nakedness. Music soothes, puts to sleep the beasts of doubt and discouragement.

“It is necessary that we find God, and he cannot be found in noise and unpeace. The more we receive through quiet prayer, the more we can give in the activity of our daily lives. In essence, it is not what we say, but what God says to us and through us. All our words are useless if they do not come from within. Words that do not carry the light of Christ only increase the darkness.”

- Mother Teresa of Calcutta

3 comments:

Eric Muhr said...

Good to be back, and thank you for the thought-provoking quotation.

Andrew Seely said...

I just found your blog, via technorati.com

Just wanted to say thanks for the linkage.

Haven't seen you comment on my blog, just wondering how you can by it.

I'll be reading yours.

Keep the faith.

Eric Muhr said...

Found your blog while trolling the Internet, looking for people with
ideas about how to be Church. I am working with a group of people with
plans to start a new work in Nampa, Idaho. Started reading your blog last May. Thanks for the visit and the comment.