https://www.ncronline.org/news/opinion/soul-seeing/seeking-wisdom-masters-social-isolation?fbclid=IwAR16Ywqcz_GozOwXBHfHiNwO3qljPqKSSD_S57KfrC1aqP2ViAcdSyH3Si8
#MastersofSocialIsolation #12. In 1941 #ThomasMerton entered the strict cloister of the Trappist Abbey of Gethsemani. In the Trappists his heart was captured by the image of men “on this miserably noisy, cruel earth, who tasted the marvelous joy of silence and solitude." pic.twitter.com/vQrHj8WFir— @RobertEllsberg (@RobertEllsberg) March 28, 2020
I thought of Thomas Merton, who originally conceived of
his flight to the Trappist monastery as a way of "drowning" to the world
and all its compulsive and self-destructive habits. And yet his
attitude shifted. He saw his vocation to solitude as a form of witness, a
point of solidarity with humanity, a call to others to reclaim their
true humanity and freedom and shake off the noise of ideologies and mass
culture. And he remained vitally engaged with a wide circle of fellow
pilgrims through his correspondence and writings.