As you can see, this is the first post to be added after a long interval, for which I apologize. Circumstances beyond my control have changed, so I hope to post much more regularly from now on.
This is the first in a series of posts on Lectio Divina, the style of prayerful reading of Scripture characteristic of Benedictine prayer.
This is the first in a series of posts on Lectio Divina, the style of prayerful reading of Scripture characteristic of Benedictine prayer.
What is lectio divina?
Lectio has also
been called by the more modern name “slow reading.” Stories are told of people in situations
where they had no access to reading material beyond the book or two currently in
their possession. So they read what they had very, very slowly, pausing to chew
over each word or sentence before going on to the next one. And when they had finished, they started over
at the beginning. That’s a bit hard to
imagine in a society where reading material overflows shelves, libraries, and
web markets to the point that we finally have to admit we will never, ever
finish the list of books we want to or think we should read. It’s not true for everyone of course, but
it’s truer for more people now than has ever before been the case.
Early generations of Christian and monastic readers couldn’t
have imagined such a plethora of reading materials. They couldn’t even have imagined the plethora
of Bibles we have readily available.
They had to rely on handwritten texts that were few, expensive and fragile. Or, more often, they had to rely on their own
memories to rerun scriptural passages they had heard read in church. But what they had available, they read and
re-read and pondered and drew out deep nourishment for the hungry heart. They also left us the legacy of lectio divina that developed over time.
Lectio is “slow
reading” focused on Scripture or other spiritual classics. It follows a pattern practiced for centuries
before it was finally recorded by a Carthusian monk named Guigo in the twelfth century. The pattern is very simple: after you’ve chosen a text (more about that in a later post), you simply read it. Perhaps you
read a whole passage to start with, perhaps not. Then you read it again very, very slowly. (Gather
up everything you’ve ever learned about speed reading and lock in a closet in the back of your mind.) You read your chosen text
over and over again, pausing to chew over each word or phrase or sentence
before going on to the next one. Early authors compared it with cows chewing
their cud. At some moment in this very
patient process, God (sometimes disguised as an anonymous inner inspiration)
will likely interrupt with an insight, a thought, a connection that invites you to
stop and think about it. Out of your
reading and pondering, you find yourself turning to God in prayer, which may be
simple conversation or quiet awareness.
Sometimes the quiet awareness will take over and keep you still in God’s
presence for a while, briefly or longer.
That is the general pattern, but it has a thousand
exceptions. It’s a pattern drawn from
long years of Christian practice by lay people, clerics, and monastics. It’s a pattern—not
a rule! Sometimes you may find yourself reading—slowly, though!—without any
interruption or inspiration at all until the time you’ve set aside comes to an
end. Sometimes a few words will send you
off into a long reflection or conversation with God, so that there is no
recognizable boundary between reflection and prayer. Sometimes, you’ll go back and forth among the
pieces of the pattern over and over again.
Or sometimes, you’ll be seized by silence right at the start. Or you’ll be silent for a time and then be
drawn to read….You get the picture! It’s
a personal interaction between you and God, not a controlled set of obligatory
steps!
The pieces of the pattern came to be identified and
named: lectio (which means reading),
meditatio (which means meditation, but more on that in a minute), oratio
(prayer) and contemplatio (silent presence).
“Meditatio” requires a little historical footnote. Originally, it didn’t mean thinking about a
text. It meant reciting it over and over
and over in your mind, squeezing the juice out of it simply by reciting it and
letting it do its own work. That could
be done during one’s prayer session or while one went about simple manual
labor. You might call it getting the text “by heart.” Meditatio later came to mean reflection,
asking the text questions or thinking about the questions the text is asking
you. It can still mean either or both!
There is also a fifth piece of the pattern that is taken for
granted but not named. It’s the
takeaway, as we might call it now. The
Word of God doesn’t actually sit still once our prayer time is over. It tends to come back and tap us on the
shoulder from time to time, maybe often, maybe not, as we go about our
day. In other words, the conversation
begun in lectio continues. And the
monastic tradition encourages readers to let it, or, better, encourage it!
Next time: Why lectio?
© 2020 Abbey of St. Walburga
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