A Benedictine Monastery
Loneliness is a universal human experience. Everyone feels it some of the time. Too many experience it most of the time. Noreena Hertz remarks that the twenty-first century, is the ‘loneliest century’ people throughout the world have ever known. Loneliness is a much different human experience or feeling than aloneness or solitude, which can be a healing balm within a busy world or a busy mind. Loneliness can lead one to accompany one’s inner self toward God, preparing one for a deep relatedness to others or it can lead to a deadly feeling of isolation, devoid of loving or experiencing love. Such a psycho-spiritual malady must be attended to and not avoided. How can loneliness be transformed to a solitude that makes room, becomes a capacity for union with God and the human family? Loneliness can become an invitation for depth relationship with God and the truest part of our self that can progressively make room for others, welcoming others, companioning others toward true belonging, at-home-ness, and promote sacrificial giving and altruistic love. The psalm verse above is an invitation to see the whole of life, even with its most painful realities, as catalysts of hope leading us toward God as our ultimate home while making peace with our imperfect lives in a troubled world. Alone or with others, our God-relatedness must become the sanctuary of the self that develops a capacity to embrace in empathy the universal thirsting for God which can never be fully quenched by anyone less than God.
Presenter: Fr. Francis Benedict, OSB