From his weekly audience today:
To hear God’s word requires the cultivation of outward and inward silence, so that His voice can resound within our hearts and shape our lives…
Silence has the capacity to open a space in our inner being, a space in which God can dwell…
In our prayers we often find ourselves facing the silence of God. We almost experience a sense of abandonment; it seems that God does not listen and does not respond. But this silence, as happened to Jesus, does not signify absence. Christians know that the Lord is present and listens, even in moments of darkness and pain, of rejection and solitude.
(Via the Vatican Information Service.)
Interestingly, he also says
This principle holds true for individual prayer, but also for our liturgies which, to facilitate authentic listening, must also be rich in moments of silence and of non verbal acceptance.
Americans seem to have difficulty with this idea.
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