Meditate with Reading
                    
                    
                    

We live in an age 
of information. We are subtly and not so subtly coerced through the television, 
the media, the Internet, to consume more and more, more and more rapidly. The 
technological tools have put us into a mode of speed—we actually start trying 
to approach the soaking up of information at a rate similar to a computer 
processing data. Even with the printed word, we have become habituated to 
reading quickly in an effort to absorb information in the shortest amount of 
time possible so we can move on to the next responsibility spread before us. Or 
we become so engrossed by the action and emotion of a story that our reading is 
as agitated as our pounding heart. 
In such a 
fast-paced environment the slow savoring of ideas and concepts has gotten lost 
in the push for quickness and efficiency. The practice of spiritual reading is 
one way to regain a more balanced and meaningful interaction with the world 
around us. It can help us slow down so that information is allowed to seep 
unhurriedly into our heart, our mind, our soul, where it can be turned over and 
tasted like a fine well-aged wine. 
Spiritual reading is a "practice" because it 
is counter-intuitive to our familiar form of reading. It is a form of meditation 
and reflection that calms a thumping heart to a gentle and silent beat. It is an 
exercise less concerned with swallowing everything before us, than with chewing 
small savory morsels that can actually work to change us from the inside out. A 
slow small meal of information becomes more nourishing to us than a feast eaten 
on the run. Surprisingly, the action of slowing our intake of information helps 
us slacken our pace as we walk through the world without—and the world 
within.
 
 
    
     
 
    
    
    
        
        
        
             
                
                "THE SPRING" FROM MEDITATION WITHOUT GURUS
                
            by Clark Strand
            
        
             
                
                FROM "WALKING"
                
            by Henry David Thoreau
            
        
             
                
                FROM THE BROTHERS KARAMAZOV
                
            by Fyodor Dostoevsky
            
        
             
                
                FROM THE LITTLE PRINCE
                
            by Antoine de Saint Exupéry
            
        
             
                
                FROM THE STORY OF THE OTHER WISE MAN
                
            This short excerpt from the story by Henry van Dyke offers some stirring thoughts for reflection during these days of holy adventure that begin at Christmas.
            
        
             
                
                THE JOYS OF REREADING
                
            Sometimes re-reading your favorite books can be more profitable than reading new ones (or ones that are new to you).
            
        
             
                
                WHY WE READ WHAT WE READ
                
            Where does the prompting to read what we read come from? I would like to hope that it is God’s gentle hand that leads us to abandon one book and pick up another.