Uncreated Silence: Prayer, Contemplation, Spiritual Relationships, and Pastoral Care

Abstract

Uncreated silence exists as the unspoken speech of the Holy Spirit, which can be heard in prayer, discerned in spiritual relationships, and lived as pastoral care. This idea is explained using biblical and theological sources, the spiritual and pastoral works of those who are known as Orthodox Christian elders, as well as select modern Orthodox and Catholic Christian leaders. Here is how this is accomplished. First, by explaining the concerns of hesychastic silence and its lack of relationality through the juxtaposition of Tomáš Špidlík’s 1988 criticism of hesychasm and Zacharias Zacharou’s 2022 instruction on hesychasm. Second, by proposing a Pneumatological solution to this question in the existence of an uncreated silence based on select New Testament accounts of the Holy Spirit, informed by the Pneumatology of Basil the Great, described by audiation, and experienced by Seraphim of Sarov. Third, by presenting uncreated silence as an apophatic relationality using the work of Christos Yannaras and Max Picard. Fourth, by demonstrating that uncreated silence is a spiritual relationality lived by elders, confessors, and those whom they guide; and by acknowledging the potential for spiritual abuse within these relationships. Fifth, by describing the connection between uncreated silence and select spiritual relationalities found in the New Testament and among Patristic sources. Sixth, by describing, in brief, the biographical, spiritual, and pastoral works of select Orthodox and Catholic spiritual leaders in the West during the 20th and 21st centuries.

Presenters

Fr. Thomas Colyandro
Director, Bachelor of Arts, Theology, St. Athanasius College, Texas, United States

Details

Presentation Type

Paper Presentation in a Themed Session

Theme

Religious Community and Socialization

KEYWORDS

Prayer,Contemplation,Spirituality,UncreatedSilence,HolySpirit,PastoralCare,Relationships,Pneumatology,Orthodox,Catholic,Christian,Eldership,Fellowship,Hesychasm,Apophaticism