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The Active Purification of Silence: (The Ancren Riwle, Part III)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 August 2024

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In discussing the purification of the exterior senses the Ancren Riwle naturally goes into the matter of the mortification of hearing. We may well anticipate that silence should play a large part in the life of a recluse, both as a mortification and penance in itself, and as a way to the full flowering of the love of God. For though it be only a means, and a negative one at that, silence does in fact lead the soul forward to contemplation in a very direct way, so direct that it provides a special foundation for the theological virtue of hope:

‘Keep well my tongue, I may well hod on in the way toward heaven. For, as Isaiah saith, “The tillage of righteousness is silence”. Silence tilleth her, and she being tilled bringeth forth eternal food for the soul…. Therefore Isaiah joins together hope and silence… . “In silence and in hope shall be your strength”.’ p. 60).

For prayer is the breath of hope, and it is impossible to ask God for anything or to raise the mind to him without this theological virtue.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1947 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers

References

1 The quotations are from the modernised version by James Morton (Chatto and Windns).