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Encounters with Silence is sublime! Each chapter is a love letter written by Karl Rahner to God, but often as I was reading these meditations I forgot I was the reader and felt as if I could have been the writer/speaker. Rahner’s thoughts and prayers were my own, or anyway they were what my heart would like to say but often cannot find the words.
There are ten chapters in the book. Each chapter concerns a particular topic or concern, so in that sense, you could read a specific chapter if you were struggling with a problem(s) in an area of your spiritual life. The chapters are as follows:
I. GOD OF MY LIFE II. GOD OF MY LORD JESUS CHRIST III. GOD OF MY PRAYER IV. GOD OF KNOWLEDGE V. GOD OF LAW VI. GOD OF MY DAILY ROUTINE VII. GOD OF THE LIVING VIII. GOD OF MY BROTHERS IX. GOD MY VOCATION X. GOD WHO IS TO COME
I’d be hard pressed to say which is my favorite, but I found chapters 7 and 8 spoke to me the most. Chapter 7 dealt with the silence of those dearly beloved who have gone on before us and Chapter 8 dealt with difficulties we have with the living. Chapter 10 was also interesting as an Advent Reflection. Definitely a book, and an author, I’ll return to and recommend.
"Why do you enjoin me to speak with you, when you don't pay attention to me? Isn't your silence a sure sign that you're not listening? Or do you really listen quite attentively, do you perhaps listen my whole life long, until I have told you everything, until I have spoken out my entire self to you? Do you remain so silent precisely because you are waiting until I am really finished....are you silent so that you can one day bring to a close the lifelong monologue of a poor human being, burden by the darkness of this world, by speaking the luminous word of eternal life, in which you will express your self in the depths of my heart?" - Karl Rahner
It's amazing how well Rahner can illustrate the emotional suffering and questioning of humans. It is as if he knows exactly what I am going through. I would recommend Rahner to anyone interested in defining the difficulties in faith and wishing to find guidance.
This is a short little book that needs to be read very slowly, taking in every sentence. It is a peek into the prayer between man and God. In a way it is like reading the psalms; each chapter/prayer starts out questioning or in doubts and ends with the trust in God. It reminds me that prayer isn't just the reciting of prayers but real unedited conversation with God: who I am now; where I am now spiritually; my frustrations and failures, my joys and hopes.
Holy holiness! This was a great book! I already immensely respected Rahner for his theological work. This was a window into his personal prayer life. He's extremely honest with God about doubts, discouragements, and frustrations, but he also draws on profound theological resources to come to terms with some of the complexity that he feels at times. I would recommend this to anyone who is looking for a model of how to be open and honest with God in a way that does not leave questions unanswered yet deepens appreciation for God's mystery.
Favorite quote from the book: "Why have You kindled in me the flame of faith, this dark light which lures us out of the bright security of our little huts into Your night?"
This is truly one of the best books on prayer I have read - it is really a series of prayers by the author that explore our relationship with God. Wonderful!
This is it. Beautifully written, beautifully intimate conversation between one man and his God. It's a book so dense with wisdom and meaning that I had to read it very slowly -- one chapter at a time -- many times aloud. And when I finished, I opened the book again at the first chapter and started over.
A short, but penetrating set of meditations. Rahner seems quite uninhibited in conveying his internal dialogue and self-questioning. He has some striking insights around the question of the encounter between an infinite and a finite being and all the various paradoxes that raises. Well worth reading.
Rahner asks questions about how to come close to God, and in so doing, invites readers into a more curious, more contemplative pursuit of life and prayer.
"I know why you are silent: Your silence is the framework of my faith, the boundless space where my love finds the strength to believe in your love ... Your love has hidden itself in silence, so that my love can reveal itself in faith."
This is a beautiful little book. Rahner's prayers are theologically deep, his questions piercing, but his interactions with God are tender and yearning. The mixture of theology, mysticism, and prayers of adoration reminds me of Tozer and is just as lovely to read.
A powerful book. One that I will come back to and read again several times I am sure. And each time I'll connect with different thoughts or insights in various ways.
Stunning little book by the great 20th century German Catholic theologian Karl Rahner. Laced through with authentic existential honesty and vibrant questioning, Rahner converses with the Silence (God), working his way to profound insight via his doubts and fears. A formidable intellect accessibly mixing it up with the everyday life of faith.
The author seeks to express his intimate experience of God in the form of prayers, or confessions, in the style of Augustine's Confessions. Both are efforts by theologians to embody thought on God through the prayer genre, and Rahner appears, as does Augustine, much the philosopher, or theologian, in the prayers. Yet, like with Augustine, within the prayers arises profound insights into thought about God.
I consider this a book to be enjoyed most by persons who are interested in the nature of God, as a Christian theological contemplation, rather than persons seeking a reading that would inspire them to encounter the Divine in silence.
Rahner’s Encounters with Silence is less a book of theology than a prayer offered in writing. Each chapter takes up a different way of naming God and turns it into an intimate meditation. The result is both unsettling and consoling, as Rahner shows that God’s silence is not absence but the space where faith and love take root.
I found the book challenging because it resists neat answers, yet that is what makes it powerful. It invites the reader to bring longing, restlessness, and inadequacy into prayer itself, and to trust that even these are part of encounter with God. It is a book to return to slowly, letting its words linger.
The title is so fitting for this book and the metaphors riveting. In between Karl Rahner’s dialogue with God there are gems of passion and perception that kept me motivated to learn more of his views. The artistry in his descriptions of his experience are thorough and captured in writing as though it were on canvas.
I am enriched and relieved by Karl Rahner’s honest reflections on God. I am in a period of what feels like the life of the book of Ecclesiastes, that all is vanity. And this book spoke to me where I am at deeply in my interior life - Karl knows the depths of despair and heights of hope, and he has restored a sense of faith in my life. A beautiful book.
Perhaps the most beautiful work of Rahner's that I have read. A book of short meditations on God and his relating to humanity. Aims at providing answers to some of the deeper questions and wondering that we have on our journey to God.
This is a rich read for all whose hearts are more attuned or interested in the contemplative side of our faith. I’ve been reading a few chapters of this book each month usually as a part of my sabbath practice. It’s a classic that I’ll be coming back to.
Fascinating prayers by Karl Rahner. One can immediately sense the deep spirituality which suffuses these prayers, but also Rahners particular and (post) modern philosophical influences underneath the surface.
A prayerful meditation on the nature of God that is both moving and yet highly inconsistent. Its best sections - particularly on Knowledge, Death, and Life - are powerful and eye-opening.
A set of prayer-like reflections on who God is, in the process of addressing Him. They are thoughtful and reflect our wrestling with the mystery of God, his ways and grace and our own finiteness.