Responding to a blog post at William Wildblood's Meeting the Masters I wrote:
"Remember that when Jesus wanted to commune with God more fully he 
withdrew from the crowds and towns and went into the deserts and 
mountains, and this remains true today, if not always literally, then 
certainly symbolically and psychologically."
The point is well 
made - if even Jesus needed to withdraw from the distractions of other 
people, noise, busyness... then how much more do we? 
And yet how
 few people do this? (maybe a couple of weeks a year of holiday... but 
then the holiday often involves two or three days of miserable 
travelling, and may itself be filled with frantic activity and excessive
 intoxication!)
In almost everybody's life, there is ample 
possibility of withdrawal, every day; If it is made a priority. Which it
 should be, because withdrawal is a necessity, not a luxury.  
A great 
strength of the Christian way is that it understands God as both outside
 of us and within us (because we are God's actual children, hence divine
 - albeit embryonically). 
According to our current challenges 
and circumstances, we can therefore seek and find God both within and 
without; as a feeling and as a relationship. 
And our assurance 
is that the necessary help will always be given if asked-for, 
listened-to and accepted (remembering that sometimes it is better for us
 not to get help but to do our own best to overcome our own difficulties
 - indeed this is the normal and usual thing); and that true help is 
ultimately directed at our eternal well-being, not necessarily or often 
what makes us happiest in this mortal life).
Read the whole thing... 
http://meetingthemasters.blogspot.co.uk/2016/09/what-is-one-thing-needful.html 
 
 
3 comments:
Very true! Our boys and I find spiritual renewal spending a week or two in the wilderness, which is pretty easy in the western US. The silence alone is amazingly restorative.
When I withdraw from society, I become self-absorbed.
Some readers of this blog will probably be interested in Rod Dreher's entries, and forthcoming book (early 2017), on the "Benedict Option."
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