“The Desert Fathers at vigil, 5th century Egypt.
Silence has always been part of the Christian inheritance.”

Before We Begin: What You’ll Find Below

My friends,
Below this letter is not an article.
It is not commentary.
It is not analysis of the latest crisis.
It is a practice.
In the fifth century, when the Roman world was unstable, violent, politically fractured, and morally confused, small communities of Christian monks fled to the deserts of Egypt and Syria. They were not running from responsibility. They were running toward clarity.
They believed something radical: that a restless, reactive soul cannot love well, cannot discern well, cannot endure well.
And so they trained.
They sat in silence.
They faced their thoughts.
They learned to notice the logismoi, those habitual interior narratives that inflame fear, pride, resentment, and despair.
They discovered something that feels almost scandalous in our age of constant stimulation:
You do not have to chase every thought.
You do not have to react to every headline.
You do not have to solve what belongs to God.
Five hundred years before algorithms learned how to monetize agitation, these monks learned how to disarm it.
Now, you and I cannot run off to the deserts of Egypt. We have families, jobs, obligations, inboxes, notifications.
But for fifteen minutes… we can go there spiritually.
We can sit in our own small “cell,” the word they used for their dwelling caves or little huts, but for us could be our bedroom or prayer corner or just a comfy chair.
We can read a Psalm slowly.
We can carry one sacred line into silence.
We can allow God to quiet what the world keeps stirring up.
That changes something.
Not in the headlines.
In you.
Below, you will find:
• A Psalm to read slowly
• One key line to carry into meditation
• A guided moment of silence
• A brief reflection drawn from the Desert Fathers and the wisdom renewed by Thomas Keating
You do not need to be good at prayer.
You only need to be willing.
Let us go to the desert together, if only for a few minutes.
And see what God does in the quiet.


Read more

Share this post

Subscribe to our newsletter

Keep up with the latest blog posts by staying updated. No spamming: we promise.
By clicking Sign Up you’re confirming that you agree with our Terms and Conditions.

Related posts