Our hearts as sacred space

COFFEE WITH WARREN, with Warren Harbeck
Cochrane Eagle, August 8, 2024

The peace and stillness that a retreat provides hold us in a sacred space where we can become vulnerable and allow God to speak an often-silent word of love, acceptance, forgiveness and hope. —Susan Campbell

As our readers are well aware, this weekend, Aug. 10-11, Cochrane’s Mount St. Francis Retreat Centre is celebrating its 75th Anniversary. Its theme will be Celebrate Sacred Space.

In anticipation of that, I ran my Feb. 15, 2024 column on the “Importance of sacred silence,” based on a letter from its director, Susan Campbell. As I’ve reflected on her words, it’s become increasingly clear to me that the ultimate sacred space, served by such silence, is our very hearts.

In that spirit, then, I’d like to congratulate the Mount on its 75th Anniversary by revisiting her letter.

WHAT I FIND SO IMPORTANT ABOUT SILENCE, especially on retreats, is that it allows the quiet presence of God to work, bringing healing, wholeness and peace. So many people find silence uncomfortable and will do anything to distract themselves from entering into that still centre deep within. There are many reasons for this, but I think one is fearing a voice that is disappointed, recriminating, condemning. Some have been told that voice is the voice of God’s judgement. Most often, it is the voice of a wounded spirit.

Some believe that God is a distant and punishing God who focuses on their faults and failings. What St. Francis understood in the core of his being is that God is a God of mercy, compassion and love. God’s love is reflected in all creation. Franciscan writer Eric Doyle, OFM, wrote that Francis recognized in all creation that “there is a love from beyond the world in the heart of everything.” Creation was created in love, for love, through love. Coming from the one source – the love within God – all creation is interconnected. That is why St. Francis called all creation brother and sister: Brother Sun, Sister Moon, Brother Wolf, Sister Water…. He would spend a great deal of time in silence, contemplating God’s marvelous creativity, closeness and compassion.

He saw that most perfectly in the coming of Jesus – God humbly becoming little and powerless to bring to humanity a message of love. In Franciscan spirituality, Jesus was always going to come to share the message of God’s love for all, even if humanity hadn’t sinned. This is because Love desires to be known. God desired to show humanity the depth of God’s love. What was started in the incarnation was completed in the crucifixion and death of Jesus. This act of surrender was, for Francis, the ultimate sign of how much God loved us because God forgave us. “If the cross of Christ does not convince us that God’s love is unconditional,” Doyle says, “then nothing will.”

It is in the silence of our heart, open to the presence and action of God’s love, that we grow in that love in our own lives: in our relationship with ourselves and with others, with the world around us, and with God. The peace and stillness that a retreat provides hold us in a sacred space where we can become vulnerable and allow God to speak an often-silent word of love, acceptance, forgiveness and hope.

Peace,
Susan Campbell, Director
Mount St. Francis Retreat Centre

THANK YOU AGAIN, SUSAN. Your thoughts on sacred silence nurture so beautifully the longings of our sacred hearts.

 

© 2024 Warren Harbeck
JoinMe@coffeewithwarren.com

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