DAY 7: Discovering Your Spiritual Rhythm

 
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Who sits in solitude and is quiet has escaped from three wars: hearing, speaking, seeing: yet against one thing shall he continually battle: that is, his own heart.
— Anthony the Great

The Effect of Solitude

The liturgy in the small chapel had just ended. I had wandered in late and was unfamiliar with anyone there. A few parishioners remained in their pews, alone and silent. The pew I sat in creaked loudly. In the silence, the noise was deafening. “Oh, no!” I thought, “What will they think of all this racket I have made?!?” Hopefully, I didn’t disturb or offend someone. I hope they don’t judge me!”

My anxiety over how I was perceived helped to highlight just how much I compare myself with others. I did not want anyone to think poorly of me. In this moment of surrounded solitude, my heart was exposed. Spending time distinctly alone serves to highlight all the ways my heart looks for another source to bring stability.


Have you ever sat alone? Or perhaps felt the isolating sting of loneliness? Loneliness can lead to self-pity, which in turn brings sorrow, and eventually despondency. Loneliness is not alone-ness. The discipline of solitude highlights our need to be surrounded, and how much we constantly are. Solitude teaches us to be comfortable just being with ourselves.

There is a story about three monks told by some early church fathers. One monk spent time reconciling broken relationships, another spent time visiting the sick, and the third retired to the desert to live in solitude.

The first two, having been overwhelmed with their work, decided to visit the third to see how he was getting on.  When the three were together, the monk in solitude poured some water into a bowl. The other two watched him devoutly. Initially, the water was in turmoil, but as the dish sat undisturbed, the water settled. When the other two looked into the water they noticed their own reflections. The third monk used the moment to teach the other two about solitude: “He who abides in the midst of men: because of the turbulence, he sees not his sins: but when he hath been quiet, above all in solitude, then does he recognize his own default.”

Solitude helps us to come to grips with our own defects. We learn to see ourselves as the Father sees us, through the lens of intense compassion. We can then take pity on ourselves and turn our hearts to the arms of the Father to find safety, security, and comfort.

“There are many who live in the mountains and behave as if they were in the town, and they are wasting their time. It is possible to be solitary in one’s mind while living in a crowd, and it is possible for one who is a solitary to live in the crowd of his own thoughts.”  ~ Amma Syncletica

I’ll see you again tomorrow when we explore The Effect of Fasting.

Blessings,

Joshua Hoffert


REFLECTION QUESTIONS

  • How and when do you resist or avoid being alone?

  • What tends to pop into your mind when you are alone?

  • What do you resort to doing when alone?

  • What troubles you or gives you angst about being alone?

  • When have you felt most comfortable being alone? Most uncomfortable?

  • What sense of God do you have when you are alone?

DAY 6: Discovering Your Spiritual Rhythm

 
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For God alone, O my soul, wait in silence, for my hope is from Him.
— Psalm 62:5
Now, again, I say to you that unless you labor and sweat for this fearsome Name to be imprinted into your heart and mind, needlessly do you live in stillness... This much-longed-for Name (Jesus Christ) is the inner essence of stillness and silence.
— Abba Isaiah the Solitary

The Effect of Silence

Silence helps to purify the prayer life in that it reveals and then gives room to silence our disparate inner voices. Silence as a rhythm of life is not so much entering silence (though that is part), but it is the discovering of God’s heart as you learn to silence your own.

“Silence greatly helps a monk, for it not only hinders him from doing something bad, but it also purifies his prayer, freeing it from every earthly thought; and it generates Godly mourning and compunction in his mind…. Silence, like a noble and beautiful mother, perfectly and unerringly gives birth to virtues through constant and unbroken communion of the soul with God. A monk who loves and seeks silence is beloved of God; for he, out of strong love for God, communicates with Him alone through pure prayer. Though he lives on earth, nonetheless his pious thought continuously resorts to heavenly things, and his mind’s entire concern is how to please God, alone, and how to erect a temple to the Holy Spirit.” ~ Abba Antiochos

According to Abba Antiochos, silence is aided by patient self-control, cultivation of a soft heart, keeping watch over the thoughts that impact the heart, and self-restraint. Vigilance watches the thoughts, meekness reaches out to God for help, forbearance continues to attempt perfection, and temperance restrains the thoughts.

Silence helps to divest us of the world things we are attached to, whether people or things. In silence your heart will be drawn to something, and that thing will occupy your thoughts. The goal of these moments is to train your heart to grope for God, and thereby create an abiding silence within.

“This good spirit (Holy Spirit), which greatly gladdens the soul and illuminates the intellect, cannot act or manifest itself where there are noise and agitation, for through them fantasies (about earthly and worldly objects) take possession of the soul.” ~ Abba Antiochos

I’ll be back tomorrow to discuss The Effect of Solitude.

Blessings,

Joshua Hoffert


REFLECTION QUESTIONS

  • How do you avoid or resist silence?

  • Do you like to fill the silence with sound or learning - music, talk shows, news, and so forth?

  • How do you actively practice the rhythm of silence before God in your life?

  • How much time each day do you give to silence (i.e. no words, printed or audible?)

  • Think of silence from God’s perspective. What would He think about your time with Him?

DAY 5: Discovering Your Spiritual Rhythm

 
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Prayer is the ascent of the intellect to God...Prayer is the communion of the intellect with God.
— Evagrius the Solitary

The Oscillating Nature of Prayer

Prayer is simple and must always be simple. It is a heart turn. For prayer to be prayer it must be widely available to anyone. It cannot be set aside for the most trained, the most gifted, the wisest, the most intelligent, the most financially successful, or the most down-trodden. It must be available to all people at all times. To Evagruis, the intellect was not so much your intelligence or thought process, it is the higher portion of yourself designed to commune with God. Communion is not contingent on how smart you are, it is all about the heart.

“Prayer is always possible for everyone, rich and poor, noble and humble, strong and weak, healthy and sick, righteous and sinful.” ~ Seraphim of Saroy

Prayer lifts the heart to God and every prayerful effort is to keep it there. We invite the Love to hold, cherish, and inspect inside of our lives. The scariest part about prayer is it begins to unravel what is within you. Most people think that by praying they are on a journey to see God, but really the journey begins with you. It is only as you see yourself authentically that you begin to see God. True prayer introduces you to yourself. And as we’ll see, the spiritual disciplines are helpful in increasing our capacity for prayer.

I’ll be back tomorrow to discuss The Effects of Silence.

Blessings,

Joshua Hoffert


PRAYERS

Here are a few short, helpful prayers. Choose one to help you keep your heart attuned to His presence today:

  • Lord Jesus Christ, have mercy on (be tender towards) me (Luke 18:13)

  • Make my heart, like Your heart (2 Corinthians 3:15-18)

  • Teach me Your ways, that I might know You (Exodus 33:13)

  • Lord Jesus Christ, the Good Shepherd, restore my soul to life again (Psalm 23:1-3)

  • Let me delight in Your will and walk in Your ways (Psalm 40:8)

  • Ravish my heart, that mine may ravish Yours (Song of Solomon 4:9)

DAY 4: Discovering Your Spiritual Rhythm

 
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He makes me lie down in green pastures, He leads me beside quiet waters, He restores my soul.
— Psalm 23:2-3

The Invitation of the Father’s Heart

Entering the peace that only the Spirit of God can bring creates times set apart to be in quiet, restful repose, and find to solitude before His heart. The practices of life in the Spirit are an aspect of the set-apartness of the Christian life. We find removal from the noise and distraction and a place of spiritual refreshing and renewing. The Christian life is the way of entering into the presence of God and allowing Him to nourish our soul. As we settle into stillness, we notice the stirrings of our soul, our deeper longings, and God’s quiet whisper to us.

But actually doing so takes practice, routine, and rhythm. Desire absent discipline will fizzle. But where desire and delight meet rhythm is born. And that rhythm is one of engaging the mystery of the life of Christ within.

As you learn to make spiritual disciplines a daily practice in your own life, here are a few friendly suggestions to get you started.

Helpful Tips

  • Choose a time and place. Stillness is best done in solitude so be sure your time and place are secluded and free of distractions.

  • Set a timer. 5-10 minutes is a good place to start. (Some disciplines cannot be done in 10 minutes but it’s a good starting point for many of them).

  • Physically be still in your quiet place. Get away from the noise and find a comfortable position in your favorite chair as a way of telling God you’re ready to listen.

  • Quiet and still your mind. Try not to empty your mind but rather focus your attention on being present with God.

  • Offer this time to the Lord in faith. Tell Him you wish to deliberately acknowledge His sovereignty and control over your life. Invite Him to reveal Himself to you in the stillness and give Him the floor.

  • Wait for the Lord. Don’t go into your time with an agenda. Simply sit before Him. If worries and thoughts take your mind down a rabbit trail, simply tell yourself (gently!) this is not the time for that and again invite the Lord to speak.

  • Ask God questions. Be prepared to dialogue with God and invite Him to speak to you.

  • Sit with your disappointments. Feel the reality of your limitations, letdowns, and everything that’s undone. It really is okay!

  • Keep a journal. Write down your prayers, meditations, and study. Recording our experiences with fasting and solitude. Writing things down preserves them for future reference, but more importantly, it gives God yet another way to reveal new things to you.

  • Find an accountability partner. Find a friend or relative you can study the disinclines with. Someone with whom you can check in regularly to encourage and support you. Schedule weekly or bi-weekly meetings with them to discuss and pray together.


When you go to prayer, deliver yourself wholly up into the hands of God, with perfect resignation, exerting an act of faith, believing that you are in the Divine Presence.
— Michael Molinos, The Spiritual Guide

How to start:

When you’re ready to begin a spiritual practice:

  • Pray a short prayer of dedication. Express your desire to be with God.
    e.i. “Here I am Lord, I want to be with you.”

  • Follow the guidelines for the practice. Respond to any invitation you sense from the Holy Spirit. Don’t hurry. You can pick up where you left off on another day.

HINT: You don’t have to do a different exercise every day. You’re free to stay with an exercise for as long as you would like - a few hours, days, months, or even an entire year!

How to finish:

When you’re done practicing a spiritual discipline:

  • Set aside the last few minutes to respond to God in prayer. Tell God what it was like for you to practice the spiritual discipline. Express your thoughts and feelings freely. Gratitude, anger, frustration, impatience - bring it all to God. Ask the Holy Spirit to seal in your memory what you need to remember.

  • Take one word or thought with you into the rest of your day. Returning to this word over time develops soul reflexes of attention to God. The practice of noticing God throughout our day shapes the way we live and interact with others.

  • Offer yourself to God and place yourself in HIs hands for the remainder of your day.

I hope you find these suggestions helpful. I’ll be back in your inbox tomorrow to introduce you to our first undercurrent of the spiritual life: The Oscillating Nature of Prayer.

Blessings,

Joshua Hoffert


ACTION STEPS

Make a plan. This is another helpful tip I’ve found our first spiritual discipline practice, consider doing the following:

  • Pick a quiet, comfortable space. Choose a room in your home or favorite outdoor space to meet with God.

  • Gather your essentials. Find your Bible, a notebook, a pen, a timer, etc. HINT: Print off your FREE Intro to Spiritual Disciplines Journal.

  • Remove the noise. Turn off your phone, put a show on for the kids, and let everyone know you’re not to be disturbed for the next little while.

  • What is one of your quiet time goals? Write it down and/or share your answer below. (You often have more motivation to reach them once you share them with someone else!)

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