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Ministry through the dark night
What do you do when
God seems far away, especially if you are a ‘professional Christian’ whose
work and salary depends on having a vibrant faith?
It is only that blind faith that
carries me through for in reality to me all is darkness. He is destroying
everything in me. There is such a terrible darkness within me, as
if everything was dead. The silence and the emptiness is so great
that I look and do not see, listen and do not hear.
Mother Teresa
Mother Teresa
You can’t stop thinking about the
beginning, the romance, the way God felt in your heart, in your body, when you
first began ministry.
There was no need to study, to
prepare; all you had to do was open your mouth and let your heart spill
over with love.
Your soul was a greenhouse
growing with faithful words, images, feelings and insights. But that
was before.
Now, years into ministry and your
heart is a dustbowl, your mouth chalk. And God? God is as silent as stone.
You turn to scripture for help,
but the words offer no comfort. The Bible reads like an artifact, the
verses rinsed of colour.
And where is your prayer, that secret
communication with God? You call out to God but in return you hear only
the empty echo of your own longing.
It’s not that God has ceased to
exist – it’s more personal than that. God has abandoned you.
It’s difficult to identify when this
distance began. Like a marriage gone stale, you just woke up one morning
and felt estranged, empty, alienated from the one you love.
The spiritual intimacy you built
your life around (your Christian identity, your calling to ministry) has
vanished and now you’re a house hollowed by fire; the exterior façade
stands, but inside only charred beams and ashes remain.
God has left you without a note,
without a forwarding address; but divorce is not an option, so you stick to the
routines, the old habits, the familiar words and practices, hoping
your faith will return to what it was before.
What’s particularly damning is that
this is your career. You’re a professional Christian. You can’t afford to
let God go AWOL.
God is your job. God is your
identity. You need faith, a living faith, in order to have some kind of
warmth to radiate to those you serve.
But no matter what you try, you
can’t work it up. You buy books, attend conferences, go on retreat and
force yourself to engage in spiritual exercises, but the truth is it all
seems like a charade. None of it works.
God has abandoned you and you’re left
only with the longing and the haunting memories of what was.
IT’S NOT THAT
GOD HAS CEASED TO EXIST – IT’S MORE PERSONAL THAN THAT. GOD HAS ABANDONED YOU.
THE GIRL FROM MACEDONIA
There was a girl from Macedonia
named Anjezë Gonxha Bojaxhiu, who at the age of five felt God’s
presence in her innermost being.
This presence she felt with her
whole heart. This presence, she knew, was the presence of Jesus, and like
a wellspring, overflowed with unending love.
Anjezë treasured her little
spring and drew sustenance each day with prayers, daily worship and secret
acts of devotion.
At the age of 12 Anjezë could no
longer contain her love for/from Jesus. She needed to find a greater
expression of fidelity.
Gonxha told her priest of her
deep longing to join Jesus in service, in suffering, in saving those whom
Jesus loved.
At that tender age she made a
commitment to God to become a missionary and spend her life in
service to Jesus.
Six years later she was accepted
into the Sisters of Loreto, a community committed to poverty,
chastity and obedience.
With a full and eager heart she
left her loving family, her culture, her friendships and all that was
familiar in order to serve the one whose presence was warmer than the
sun, more nourishing than food.
She betrothed herself to Jesus and
his suffering among the poor. When she made her vows, her name was
changed to Teresa.
After years of formation, Teresa felt
‘complete happiness’ as ‘Jesus’ little spouse’, and was eager to
serve God as a teacher in Calcutta.
For nine years she endured long
hours on her feet teaching, cooking, cleaning and attending communal
prayers within her small mission community.
She spent the few hours away
from her teaching duties visiting and serving the poor. It was hard work,
surrounded by people stuck in unbearable poverty, with few moments
for rest; yet Mother Teresa endured all of it happily.
The source of her happiness, she
wrote to her family, was ‘the opportunity to imitate Jesus and live
in union with Him’.
Then on 10th September 1946, at the
age of 36, while travelling by train for her annual retreat with her
community in Darjeeling, she had a mystical encounter with Jesus in which
she heard him say to her, ‘I thirst.’
In later years she would expound
on this experience as a profound vision of Jesus thirsting on the cross
for love, for souls, for companions to share his work and suffering.
It was out of this experience that
Teresa sensed a deep calling to found the Missionaries of Charity, an
order that would commit to ‘carry Christ into the homes and streets of the
slums, among the sick, dying, the beggars, and the little street
children’.
For a year following this encounter,
Mother Teresa was graced by a series of deep mystical experiences
with Jesus. In these intimate encounters, she felt herself being addressed
as ‘My spouse’ and ‘my own little one’.
In return she called Jesus ‘My
Jesus’ or ‘my own Jesus’. In these conversations she sensed Jesus
revealing his heart to her. She sensed his pain, his love,
his compassion, his desire for those who suffer.
She heard Jesus pleading
continually, ‘Come, come, carry me into the holes of the poor. Come, be
my light.’
In answer to Jesus’ pleading and
despite her low status, criticism from other sisters,
interior doubts, and resistance from her superiors, Mother Teresa
succeeded in founding the Missionaries of Charity in 1948. She had finally
realised her childhood dream to serve the poorest of the poor.
SO WHAT IS THE
DARK NIGHT OF THE SOUL? IT’S A TIME WHEN GOD FEELS HIDDEN
AND INACCESSIBLE
Then unexpectedly, just one year
after founding the Missionaries of Charity, her spirit was
plunged into darkness, her prayer became empty, and her Jesus, ‘my
own Jesus’, went suddenly silent (and would remain silent for the rest of
her life).
She had given her life to God in
trust, in the hope that Jesus would be faithful, present, an attentive
companion in the midst of the world’s suffering.
But once her work began, Jesus became
withdrawn, imperceptible, and invisible. For the next 11 years, Mother
Teresa would undergo profound suffering and confusion at the loss of
the intimacy of Jesus and the consolations of prayer.
For some time her confessor (ignorant
of Teresa’s situation) encouraged her to set aside her spiritual grief and
continue to pour herself into her work. She followed his advice, but the
inner anguish and loneliness continued.
Finally, while on
retreat, Mother Teresa spoke with a wise priest who instructed her to
express her pain to Jesus. ‘Write to Him,’ he counselled. ‘Write to Jesus and
tell Him of your betrayal, your broken heart, the emptiness that has taken
hold of you.’ So she did (excerpted).
My own Jesus,
They say people in hell suffer eternal pain because of the loss of God – they would go through all that suffering if they had just a little hope of possessing God. In my soul I feel just that terrible pain of loss, of God not wanting me, of God not being God, of God not really existing (Jesus, please forgive my blasphemies, I have been told to write everything). That darkness that surrounds me on all sides. I can’t lift my soul to God – no light or inspiration enters my soul. I speak of love for souls, of tender love for God, words pass through my lips, and I long with a deep longing to believe in them.
They say people in hell suffer eternal pain because of the loss of God – they would go through all that suffering if they had just a little hope of possessing God. In my soul I feel just that terrible pain of loss, of God not wanting me, of God not being God, of God not really existing (Jesus, please forgive my blasphemies, I have been told to write everything). That darkness that surrounds me on all sides. I can’t lift my soul to God – no light or inspiration enters my soul. I speak of love for souls, of tender love for God, words pass through my lips, and I long with a deep longing to believe in them.
…In my heart there is no faith, no love, no trust. There is
so much pain, the pain of longing, the pain of not being wanted. I want
God with all the powers of my soul and yet there between us is
a terrible separation. I don’t pray any longer. I utter words of
community prayers and try my utmost to get out of every word the sweetness
it has to give. But my prayer of union is not there any longer. I no
longer pray. My soul is not one with You, and yet when alone in the
streets I talk to You for hours, of my longing for You. How intimate
are those words and yet so empty, for they leave me far from You.
…I do my best. I spend myself but I am more than convinced
that the work is not mine. I do not doubt that it was You who called me,
with so much love and force. It was You, I know….but I have no faith,
I don’t believe. Jesus, don’t let my soul be deceived, nor let me deceive
anyone.
THE DARK NIGHT
Years after her death, biographers
have revealed that Mother Teresa’s suffering was an experience of the
dark night of the soul. The term ‘dark night of the soul’ is a phrase
penned by Carmelite John of the Cross, in the 16th century.
The dark night of the soul
has become commonplace in the culture and in Christian circles, but
the origins of the term and the experience it’s trying to name are not as
well known.
It might be helpful to first name
what the dark night does not refer to:
•
The dark night does not refer to misfortune or illness.
•
The dark night isn’t sinister nor does it refer to sin, evil or spiritual
apathy.
•
The dark night is not a rare privileged experience restricted to holy
people. The dark night of the soul is actually a common experience in
the Christian life and can occur throughout a person’s faith journey.
•
The dark night doesn’t have to be unpleasant. It’s possible a person can
welcome the dark night as a time of deepening trust and freedom.
DURING THE
DARK NIGHT, GOD TRANSFORMS US IN SECRET, BENEATH OUR KNOWLEDGE,
BENEATH OUR OWN PERCEPTION
WHEN GOD HIDES
So what is the dark night of the
soul? It’s a time when God feels profoundly silent; a time when God
feels hidden and inaccessible.
Worship, prayer and
other spiritual practices no longer deliver the same spiritual
consolations that you used to receive. Faith practices begin to feel useless,
at times empty, alienating, and even inauthentic.
Scripture becomes flat and
unappealing and the desire to pray or worship seems to have vanished.
During the dark night you are no
longer certain of what you know of God or even yourself. In the dark night
you can feel helpless, unable to control or understand your spiritual
life.
While previously you could talk
endlessly of your faith and love for God, now words fail. There seems to
be no authentic expression for what you’re experiencing, for who or where
God is.
As with Mother Teresa, the dark night
is particularly excruciating when you are in ministry. There can be a
deep sense of hypocrisy as you try to profess and encourage people to seek
out an experience of God’s love and presence when
you only feel emptiness and absence.
you only feel emptiness and absence.
We see this alienation in the
words of Mother Teresa as she writes: ‘I speak of love for souls, of
tender love for God, words pass through my lips, and I long with a
deep longing to believe in them.’
And yet, despite the loneliness,
despite the silence, you notice that sin has no appeal. At times you
may want to return to old distractions and escapes, but you find your soul
resists these temptations.
In the dark night, a person
can discover that despite the lack of any spiritual comfort, there
remains within the soul a blind trust in God. You feel your faith (your
practices, images, words, understandings) dissipating, and yet at the same
time you have to admit, somehow your faith persists.
Even when you become
despondent and try to rid yourself of faith, still,
without encouragement, your heart waits for God.
Again, we see this dynamic in
Mother Teresa as she goes back and forth, claiming she can no longer
pray, and yet she finds ‘when alone in the streets I talk to You for
hours, of my longing for You’.
WHEN GOD FREES US FROM GOD
What is happening in the dark
night of the soul? The first response is: we don’t know. And that
seems to be the point.
The term ‘dark night’ does not
refer to evil or sin, but to a lack of perception.
A better translation from the
original
Spanish would be ‘the obscure’ night of the soul.
Spanish would be ‘the obscure’ night of the soul.
It’s a period in our spiritual
journey when God’s work in us is obscured, hidden.
During the dark night, God
transforms us in secret, beneath our knowledge, beneath our own
perception, without our input or management of the process.
THE DARK
NIGHT TEACHES US TO TRUST THE HIDDENESS OF GOD
Why is this necessary? Why does God’s
work take place under the cover of darkness?
The dark night is necessary
because our images of God, our words for God, our theologies and
practices are too small and limited.
God is mysterious, transcendent,
beyond our comprehension. As Augustine said, ‘If you think you’ve gotten
God, it is not God you’ve gotten.’
Not only is God beyond our
ability to grasp, God is simultaneously too unbearably immanent (closer
than our own breathing, our own heartbeat) for us to perceive.
As human beings we continually seek a
container for God. We try to grasp the mystery of God through words, practices,
songs, thoughts, feelings, memories and images.
We substitute these symbols of
God for the reality of the great ‘I Am’. Over time our theologies, our
spiritual practices, our experiences of faith, our emotional reactions,
even our belief statements can become idols that limit and reduce our
awareness of God’s life and freedom.
Similarly, as creatures created in
the image of God, we are also ignorant of our own potential. It’s
difficult for us to perceive, much less live from, our innate capacity for
love, generosity and compassion.
We are created ‘a little lower
than God’ (Psalm 8:5, NASB), and yet we struggle to embody our true nature as
God’s beloved. We live within the confines of the prescribed images
and stories handed to us by our families and culture.
As we grow in faith we become
attached to certain fixed ideas about who we are, who God is, and how
we relate to one another. We construct a faith life that constricts God
and our true identity.
Eventually, God has to liberate us
from our own faith, our own ideas about God, our own
(limited) understanding of who we are. As Meister Eckhart once wrote
when he realised that the God he was serving was too small, ‘I pray God to
rid me of God.’
We see these dynamics at work in
the scriptures. The Pharisees and Sadducees were devoted to
particular ideas, words and images of God.
We can see these leaders were so
deeply attached to their understanding of God that they were unable
to perceive the Spirit of God at work in Jesus. Their spirituality
(beliefs, practices, experiences) had become an idol, a hindrance
to the presence of the reality of God in their midst.
The same process occurs with the
disciples. The followers of Jesus want to find a label, a
definition for Jesus that they can categorise and manage (is he a
prophet, a revolutionary, a teacher?). They are uncomfortable with the
unpredictability of Jesus. We watch as Jesus continually breaks through
the limited definitions the disciples place on him (see Mark 8:27-33).
The disciples, like the
Pharisees, need to be liberated from ideas and practices they have
built around what it means to know and follow Jesus.
They undergo this liberation during
a profound time of absence, helplessness, confusion and ‘darkness’,
when the Jesus they knew and touched is killed and resurrected.
THE GIFT OF DARKNESS
The experience of the dark
night, though painful, can be fruitful in deepening our companionship
with Jesus.
After 11 years in the
dark, Mother Teresa trusted her inner suffering to a faithful priest
who helped her see that her period of darkness was very similar to
the darkness that Jesus experienced on the cross.
Once she was able to see this
stage of her faith as an invitation to deeper trust and companionship
with Jesus’ suffering, her anguish was ended and she
began a new, more empowered season of life and work.
began a new, more empowered season of life and work.
In the dark night she sensed an even
deeper solidarity and intimacy with the lonely, the destitute, all
who are unseen, unloved and abandoned. She no longer turned to God to
give her spiritual visions and consolations, but now accompanied God
in the hard work of loving the unloved.
The dark night is a time of
liberation when God weans us from our reliance on spiritual
experience, empowering us to no longer live as servants but as
friends (John 15:15).
As we embrace the unknowing, as
we allow ourselves to trust that God is in charge of our spiritual lives,
we can learn to relax, take risks and let go of our anxiety about the
future.
The experience of the dark night
teaches us to be more comfortable in questions, in unknowing, in entering
into the lives and situations of people who are in despair, knowing that
somehow God is making a way.
Through the dark night we learn,
as Mother Teresa learned, to trust others to carry our faith for us.
Many times Mother Teresa offered
to leave public service, but her sisters and her confessor assured her that
although she could not sense her own faith, her life radiated with God’s
love.
Ultimately, the dark night teaches
us to trust the hiddenness of God, knowing that our theologies, our
practices, even our experiences of God can be limiting.
THE DARK NIGHT
IS A TIME OF LIBERATION WHEN GOD WEANS US FROM OUR RELIANCE
ON SPIRITUAL EXPERIENCE
MINISTERING IN THE DARK
How do we proclaim the love
of God when God feels hidden? This is a particular dilemma for
youth workers. Adolescence is a time of spiritual romance, a time
for forming (not dismantling) faith.
Like many youth workers, I seek
to help teenagers collect experiences, words, images and encounters
with God.
How strange it is to support this
process when we know that someday God will need to remove this same
faith that we’re helping teenagers construct.
As we work to build faith
(particularly in the midst of our own deconstruction), we
must remember that all things happen according to God’s timing. We
must help people respond to their yearning and questions by providing
concrete teaching and encounters with God.
However, we can help them
prepare for seasons of darkness by allowing for a variety of words and
images (just as the Bible does) that include wonder, mystery
and incomprehension.
As we serve as models
and mentors to young people, we can help them by being truthful about
our own times of doubt and struggle.
We need to help them understand
that there are different seasons to a life of faith, and that just as
the disciples went through periods of disillusionment, we too will go
through times when our understanding of God will be found wanting.
As we minister through our own dark
nights, we need a spirit of gentleness and self-compassion towards
ourselves. The dark night can be a time of loneliness and grief.
We need to find others to
talk with, particularly people who we can trust with our interior
doubts and suffering. Through the dark night we need others who can sit
with us in the silence and uncertainty, people who see God’s work in
us even when we cannot.
Most of all, the dark night
invites us into deeper trust – trust in God, trust in the community of
faith, trust in ourselves. It is this trust, despite signs, that will lead
to greater empowerment and faith.
One of the first Christians to help
articulate the dark night was Teresa of Avila, a companion and mentor
to John of the Cross.
After crossing through a period
when God felt deeply hidden and silent, Teresa penned this poem to
encourage those travelling in the dark:
Let nothing
disturb you;
Let nothing make you afraid;
All things pass;
But God is unchanging.
Patience
is enough for everything.
You who have God
lack nothing.
God alone is sufficient.
Let nothing make you afraid;
All things pass;
But God is unchanging.
Patience
is enough for everything.
You who have God
lack nothing.
God alone is sufficient.
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