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ACCEPTING THE
EMBRACE of
GOD:
THE
ANCIENT ART
of
LECTIO
DIVINA
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by
Fr. Luke Dysinger,
O.S.B.
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1.
THE PROCESS
of
LECTIO
DIVINA |
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A
VERY ANCIENT
art, practiced at one time by all Christians,
is the technique known as lectio divina
- a slow, contemplative praying of the
Scriptures which enables the Bible, the Word
of God, to become a means of union with God.
This ancient practice has been kept alive in
the Christian monastic tradition, and is one
of the precious treasures of Benedictine
monastics and oblates. Together with the
Liturgy and daily manual labor, time set aside
in a special way for lectio divina
enables us to discover in our daily life
an underlying spiritual rhythm. Within this
rhythm we discover an increasing ability to
offer more of ourselves and our relationships
to the Father, and to accept the embrace that
God is continuously extending to us in the
person of his Son Jesus Christ.
Lectio - reading/listening |
THE ART
of lectio divina begins with
cultivating the ability to listen deeply, to
hear “with the ear of our hearts” as St.
Benedict encourages us in the Prologue to the
Rule. When we read the Scriptures we should
try to imitate the prophet Elijah. We should
allow ourselves to become women and men who
are able to listen for the still, small voice
of God
(I
Kings 19:12); the “faint murmuring sound” which is God's word for us, God's
voice touching our hearts. This gentle
listening is an “atunement” to the presence of
God in that special part of God's creation
which is the Scriptures.
THE CRY
of the prophets to ancient Israel was the
joy-filled command to “Listen!” “Sh'ma
Israel: Hear,
O Israel!” In lectio divina we,
too, heed that command and turn to the
Scriptures, knowing that we must “hear” -
listen - to the voice of God, which often
speaks very softly. In order to hear someone
speaking softly we must learn to be silent. We
must learn to love silence. If we are
constantly speaking or if we are surrounded
with noise, we cannot hear gentle sounds. The
practice of lectio divina,
therefore, requires that we first quiet down
in order to hear God's word to us. This is the
first step of lectio divina,
appropriately called lectio
- reading.
THE READING
or listening which is the first step in
lectio divina is very different from
the speed reading which modern Christians
apply to newspapers, books and even to the
Bible. Lectio is reverential
listening; listening both in a spirit of
silence and of awe. We are listening for the
still, small voice of God that will speak to
us personally - not loudly, but intimately. In
lectio we read slowly,
attentively, gently listening to hear a word
or phrase that is God's word for us this day.
ONCE WE
have found a word or a passage in the
Scriptures that speaks to us in a personal
way, we must take it in and “ruminate” on it.
The image of the ruminant animal quietly
chewing its cud was used in antiquity as a
symbol of the Christian pondering the Word of
God. Christians have always seen a scriptural
invitation to lectio divina in the example of
the Virgin Mary “pondering in her heart” what
she saw and heard of Christ
(Luke 2:19).
For us today these images are a reminder that
we must take in the word - that is, memorize
it - and while gently repeating it to
ourselves, allow it to interact with our
thoughts, our hopes, our memories, our
desires. This is the second step or stage in
lectio divina - meditatio. Through meditatio
we allow God's word to become His word for us,
a word that touches us and affects us at our
deepest levels.
THE THIRD
step in lectio divina is
oratio - prayer: prayer understood
both as dialogue with God, that is, as loving
conversation with the One who has invited us
into His embrace; and as consecration, prayer
as the priestly offering to God of parts of
ourselves that we have not previously believed
God wants. In this consecration-prayer we
allow the word that we have taken in and on
which we are pondering to touch and change our
deepest selves. Just as a priest consecrates
the elements of bread and wine at the
Eucharist, God invites us in lectio divina to
hold up our most difficult and pain-filled
experiences to Him, and to gently recite over
them the healing word or phrase He has given
us in our lectio and meditatio. In this
oratio, this consecration-prayer, we
allow our real selves to be touched and
changed by the word of God.
Contemplatio -
contemplation |
FINALLY,
WE
simply rest in the presence of the One who has
used His word as a means of inviting us to
accept His transforming embrace. No one who
has ever been in love needs to be reminded
that there are moments in loving relationships
when words are unnecessary. It is the same in
our relationship with God. Wordless, quiet
rest in the presence of the One Who loves us
has a name in the Christian tradition -
contemplatio, contemplation. Once again we
practice silence, letting go of our own words;
this time simply enjoying the experience of
being in the presence of God.
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2.
THE UNDERLYING RHYTHM
of
LECTIO
DIVINA |
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IF WE
are to practice lectio divina
effectively, we must travel back in time to an
understanding that today is in danger of being
almost completely lost. In the Christian past
the words action (or practice,
from the Greek praktikos)
and contemplation did not describe
different kinds of Christians engaging (or not
engaging) in different forms of prayer and
apostolates. Practice and contemplation were
understood as the two poles of our underlying,
ongoing spiritual rhythm: a gentle oscillation
back and forth between spiritual “activity”
with regard to God and “receptivity.”
PRACTICE
- spiritual “activity” - referred in ancient
times to our active cooperation with God's
grace in rooting out vices and allowing the
virtues to flourish. The direction of
spiritual activity was not outward in the
sense of an apostolate, but inward -
down into the depths of the soul where the
Spirit of God is constantly transforming us,
refashioning us in God's image. The
active life is thus coming to see who
we truly are and allowing ourselves to be
remade into what God intends us to become.
IN
THE early
monastic tradition contemplation
was understood in two ways. First was
theoria physike, the
contemplation of God in creation - God in “the
many.” Second was theologia,
the contemplation of God in Himself without
images or words - God as “The One.” From this
perspective lectio divina serves
as a training-ground for the contemplation of
God in His creation.
IN
CONTEMPLATION
we cease from interior spiritual doing
and learn simply to be, that is
to rest in the presence of our loving Father.
Just as we constantly move back and forth in
our exterior lives between speaking and
listening, between questioning and reflecting,
so in our spiritual lives we must learn to
enjoy the refreshment of simply being
in God's presence, an experience that
naturally alternates (if we let it!) with our
spiritual practice.
IN
ANCIENT times
contemplation was not regarded as a goal to be
achieved through some method of prayer, but
was simply accepted with gratitude as God's
recurring gift. At intervals the Lord invites
us to cease from speaking so that we can
simply rest in his embrace. This is the pole
of our inner spiritual rhythm called
contemplation.
HOW
DIFFERENT this
ancient understanding is from our modern
approach! Instead of recognizing that we all
gently oscillate back and forth between
spiritual activity and receptivity, between
practice and contemplation, we today tend to
set contemplation before ourselves as a goal -
something we imagine we can achieve through
some spiritual technique. We must be willing
to sacrifice our “goal-oriented” approach if
we are to practice lectio divina,
because lectio divina has no
other goal than spending time with God through
the medium of His word. The amount of time we
spend in any aspect of lectio divina,
whether it be rumination, consecration or
contemplation depends on God's Spirit, not on
us. Lectio divina teaches
us to savor and delight in all the different
flavors of God's presence, whether they be
active or receptive modes of experiencing Him.
IN lectio divina we offer ourselves to God; and we are
people in motion. In ancient times this inner
spiritual motion was described as a helix - an
ascending spiral. Viewed in only two
dimensions it appears as a circular motion
back and forth; seen with the added dimension
of time it becomes a helix, an ascending
spiral by means of which we are drawn ever
closer to God. The whole of our spiritual
lives were viewed in this way, as a gentle
oscillation between spiritual activity and
receptivity by means of which God unites us
ever closer to Himself. In just the same way
the steps or stages of lectio divina
represent an oscillation back and forth
between these spiritual poles. In lectio
divina we recognize our underlying
spiritual rhythm and discover many different
ways of experiencing God's presence - many
different ways of praying.
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3.
THE PRACTICE
of
LECTIO
DIVINA |
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CHOOSE
a text of the Scriptures that you wish to
pray. Many Christians use in their daily
lectio divina one of the readings from the
Eucharistic liturgy for the day; others prefer
to slowly work through a particular book of
the Bible. It makes no difference which text
is chosen, as long as one has no set goal of
“covering” a certain amount of text: the
amount of text “covered” is in God's hands,
not yours.
PLACE
YOURSELF in a
comfortable position and allow yourself to
become silent. Some Christians focus for a few
moments on their breathing; other have a
beloved “prayer word” or “prayer phrase” they
gently recite in order to become interiorly
silent. For some the practice known as
“centering prayer” makes a good, brief
introduction to lectio divina. Use
whatever method is best for you and allow
yourself to enjoy silence for a few moments.
THEN
TURN to the
text and read it slowly, gently. Savor each
portion of the reading, constantly listening
for the “still, small voice” of a word or
phrase that somehow says, “I am for you
today.” Do not expect lightening or ecstasies.
In lectio divina God is
teaching us to listen to Him, to seek Him in
silence. He does not reach out and grab us;
rather, He softly, gently invites us ever more
deeply into His presence.
NEXT
TAKE the word
or phrase into yourself. Memorize it and
slowly repeat it to yourself, allowing it to
interact with your inner world of concerns,
memories and ideas. Do not be afraid of
“distractions.” Memories or thoughts are
simply parts of yourself which, when they rise
up during lectio divina, are
asking to be given to God along with the rest
of your inner self. Allow this inner
pondering, this rumination, to invite you into
dialogue with God.
THEN,
SPEAK to God.
Whether you use words or ideas or images or
all three is not important. Interact with God
as you would with one who you know loves and
accepts you. And give to Him what you have
discovered in yourself during your experience
of meditatio. Experience yourself as
the priest that you are. Experience God using
the word or phrase that He has given you as a
means of blessing, of transforming the ideas
and memories, which your pondering on His word
has awakened. Give to God what you have found
within your heart.
FINALLY,
SIMPLY
rest in God's embrace. And when He invites you
to return to your pondering of His word or to
your inner dialogue with Him, do so. Learn to
use words when words are helpful, and to let
go of words when they no longer are necessary.
Rejoice in the knowledge that God is with you
in both words and silence, in spiritual
activity and inner receptivity.
SOMETIMES
IN lectio divina one will return
several times to the printed text, either to
savor the literary context of the word or
phrase that God has given, or to seek a new
word or phrase to ponder. At other times only
a single word or phrase will fill the whole
time set aside for lectio divina.
It is not necessary to anxiously assess the
quality of one's lectio divina
as if one were “performing” or seeking some
goal: lectio divina has no goal
other than that of being in the presence of
God by praying the Scriptures.
Lectio Divina as a Group Exercise |
THE
most authentic and traditional form of
Christian lectio divina is the
solitary or “private” practice described to
this point. In recent years, however, many
different forms of so-called “group lectio”
have become popular and are now
widely-practiced. These group exercises can
be very useful means of introducing and
encouraging the practice of lectio
divina; but they should not become a
substitute for an encounter and communion with
the Living God that can only take place in
that privileged solitude where the biblical
Word of God becomes transparent to the Very
Word Himself - namely private lectio
divina.
IN
churches of the Third World where books are
rare, a form of corporate lectio divina
is becoming common in which a text from the
Scriptures is pondered by Christians praying
together in a group. The method of group
lectio divina described here was
introduced at St. Andrew's Abbey by oblates
Doug and Norvene Vest: it is used as part of
the Benedictine Spirituality for Laity
workshops conducted at the Abbey each summer.
THIS
FORM of
lectio divina works best in a group of
between four and eight people. A group leader
coordinates the process and facilitates
sharing. The same text from the Scriptures is
read out three times, followed each time by a
period of silence and an opportunity for each
member of the group to share the fruit of her
or his lectio.
THE
FIRST reading
(the text is actually read twice on this
occasion) is for the purpose of hearing a word
or passage that touches the heart. When the
word or phrase is found, it is silently taken
in, and gently recited and pondered during the
silence which follows. After the silence each
person shares which word or phrase has touched
his or her heart.
THE
SECOND reading
(by a member of the opposite sex from the
first reader) is for the purpose of “hearing”
or “seeing” Christ in the text. Each ponders
the word that has touched the heart and asks
where the word or phrase touches his or her
life that day. In other words, how is Christ
the Word touching his own experience, his own
life? How are the various members of the group
seeing or hearing Christ reach out to them
through the text? Then, after the silence,
each member of the group shares what he or she
has “heard” or “seen.”
THE
THIRD and final
reading is for the purpose of experiencing
Christ “calling us forth” into doing
or being. Members ask
themselves what Christ in the text is calling
them to do or to
become today or this week. After the
silence, each shares for the last time; and
the exercise concludes with each person
praying for the person on the right.
THOSE
WHO who
regularly practice this method of praying and
sharing the Scriptures regularly find it to be
an excellent way of developing trust within a
group; it also is an excellent way of
consecrating projects and hopes to Christ
before more formal group meetings. A summary
of this method for group lectio divina
is appended at the end of this article.
IN
THE ancient
tradition lectio divina was
understood as being one of the most important
ways in which Christians experience God in
creation. After all, the Scriptures are part
of creation! If one is daily growing in the
art of finding Christ in the pages of the
Bible, one naturally begins to discover Him
more clearly in aspects of the other things He
has made. This includes, of course, our own
personal history.
OUR
OWN lives are
fit matter for lectio divina.
Very often our concerns, our relationships,
our hopes and aspirations naturally intertwine
with our pondering on the Scriptures, as has
been described above. But sometimes it is
fitting to simply sit down and “read” the
experiences of the last few days or weeks in
our hearts, much as we might slowly read and
savor the words of Scripture in lectio
divina. We can attend “with the
ear of our hearts” to our own memories,
listening for God's gentle presence in the
events of our lives. We thus allow ourselves
the joy of experiencing Christ reaching out to
us through our own memories. Our own personal
story becomes “salvation history.”
FOR
THOSE who are
new to the practice of lectio divina
a group experience of “lectio on
life” can provide a helpful introduction. An
approach that has been used at workshops at
St. Andrew's Priory is detailed at the end of
this article. Like the experience of lectio
divina shared in community, this group
experience of lectio on life can foster
relationships in community and enable personal
experiences to be consecrated - offered to
Christ - in a concrete way.
HOWEVER,
UNLIKE
scriptural lectio divina
shared in community, this group lectio
on life contains more silence than
sharing. The role of group facilitators or
leaders is important, since they will be
guiding the group through several periods of
silence and reflection without the
“interruption” of individual sharing until the
end of the exercise. Since the experiences we
choose to “read” or “listen to” may be
intensely personal, it is important in this
group exercise to safeguard privacy by making
sharing completely optional.
IN
BRIEF, one
begins with restful silence, then gently
reviews the events of a given period of time.
One seeks an event, a memory, which touches
the heart just as a word or phrase in
scriptural lectio divina does.
One then recalls the setting, the
circumstances; one seeks to discover how God
seemed to be present or absent from the
experience. One then offers the event to God
and rests for a time in silence. A suggested
method for group lectio divina
on life is given in the Appendix to this
article.
LECTIO
DIVINA is an
ancient spiritual art that is being
rediscovered in our day. It is a way of
allowing the Scriptures to become again what
God intended that they should be - a means of
uniting us to Himself. In lectio divina
we discover our own underlying spiritual
rhythm. We experience God in a gentle
oscillation back and forth between spiritual
activity and receptivity, in the movement from
practice into contemplation and back again
into spiritual practice.
LECTIO
DIVINA teaches
us about the God who truly loves us. In
lectio divina we dare to believe that
our loving Father continues to extend His
embrace to us today. And His embrace is real.
In His word we experience ourselves as
personally loved by God; as the recipients of
a word which He gives uniquely to each of us
whenever we turn to Him in the Scriptures.
FINALLY,
lectio divina teaches us about
ourselves. In lectio divina we
discover that there is no place in our hearts,
no interior corner or closet that cannot be
opened and offered to God. God teaches us in
lectio divina what it means to
be members of His royal priesthood - a people
called to consecrate all of our memories, our
hopes and our dreams to Christ.
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APPENDIX: TWO
APPROACHES
to
GROUP LECTIO
DIVINA |
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1.
Lectio Divina Shared in Community |
(A)
Listening for the Gentle Touch of Christ the
Word
(The
Literal Sense)
1.
One person reads aloud (twice) the
passage of scripture, as others are attentive
to some segment that is especially meaningful
to them.
2.
Silence for 1-2 minutes. Each hears and
silently repeats a word or phrase that
attracts.
3.
Sharing aloud: [A word or phrase that has
attracted each person]. A simple statement of
one or a few words. No elaboration.
(B) How
Christ the Word speaks to ME
(The
Allegorical Sense)
4.
Second reading of same passage by another person.
5.
Silence
for 2-3 minutes. Reflect on “Where does the
content of this reading touch my life today?”
6.
Sharing aloud: Briefly: “I hear, I
see...”
(C) What
Christ the Word Invites me to DO
(The
Moral Sense)
7.
Third reading by still another person.
8.
Silence for 2-3 minutes. Reflect on “I
believe that God wants me to . . . . . .
today/this week.”
9.
Sharing aloud: at somewhat greater length the
results of each one's reflection. [Be
especially aware of what is shared by the
person to your right.]
10.
After full sharing, pray for the person to
your right.
Note:
Anyone may “pass” at any time. If instead of
sharing with the group you prefer to pray
silently , simply state this aloud and
conclude your silent prayer with Amen.
2.
Lectio
on Life: Applying Lectio Divina
to my personal Salvation History |
Purpose: to apply
a method of prayerful reflection to a
life/work incident (instead of to a scripture
passage)
(A)
Listening for the Gentle Touch of Christ the
Word
(The
Literal Sense)
1.
Each person quiets the body and mind: relax,
sit comfortably but alert, close eyes, attune
to breathing...
2.
Each person gently reviews events, situations,
sights, encounters that have happened since
the beginning of the retreat/or during the
last month at work.
(B)
Gently Ruminating, Reflecting
(Meditatio
- Meditation)
3.
Each person allows the self to focus on one
such offering.
a)
Recollect the setting, sensory details,
sequence of events, etc.
b)
Notice where the greatest energy seemed to be
evoked. Was there a turning point or shift?
c)
In
what ways did God seem to be present? To what
extent was I aware then? Now?
(C)
Prayerful Consecration, Blessing
(Oratio
- Prayer)
4.
Use a word or phrase from the Scriptures to
inwardly consecrate - to offer up to God in
prayer - the incident and interior
reflections. Allow God to accept and bless
them as your gift.
(D)
Accepting Christ's Embrace; Silent Presence to
the Lord
(Contemplatio
- Contemplation)
5.
Remain in silence for some period.
(E)
Sharing our Lectio Experience with Each
Other
(Operatio
- Action; works)
6.
Leader calls the group back into “community.”
7.
All share briefly (or remain in continuing
silence).
The author considers this
article to be in the Public Domain. This
article may therefore be downloaded,
reproduced and distributed without special
permission from the author. It was first
published in the Spring, 1990 (vol.1, no.1)
edition of Valyermo Benedictine.
It
has subsequently been reprinted as (1) “Appendix
2” in The Art and Vocation of Caring for
People in Pain by Karl A. Schultz (Paulist
Press, 1993), pp. 98-110; and in (2) An Invitation to Centering Prayer with and
Introduction to Lectio Divina, by Basil
Pennington and Luke Dysinger (Liguori/Triumph,
2001)
From here you may return to the
St. Andrew's Abbey Homepage.
This document was last updated on
12/9/05 at
10:30 a.m.
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