Gospel: Mark 8: 11-13
We human beings look incessantly for signs. We play Bible roulette to seek for answers. We consult mediums, tarot cards, the entrails of chickens to see what the gods portend. We stare at the skies and pore over our English muffin to see if the Virgin Mary is appearing there. We strain every ounce of our body to see if God is speaking something aloud to us, some allocution - anything at all - in the hopes that we might get some sign, even though we could not explain what it is we are looking for.
Why do we do this? We are not content with God's language which is silence. Silence makes us uncomfortable. It makes us uncomfortable, for silence reveals God fully to us. Silence reveals us completely to ourselves. And we like neither, for what we learn therein is often unpleasant. We learn that we have work to do. We have repentance and conversion to undertake, and we do not want to do that. So we create some other reality, some false religion filled with sign seeking.
Jesus was completely comfortable in silence. He would spend entire nights alone on a mountain in silence. This is how he came to know God. This is how he came to understand himself. This is how he came to clarity regarding the world around him. We too can come to these places of awareness if we but give up the vanity of sign seeking and learn to be in silence, listening to the voice of God within. Lent is coming, a perfect time to enter the desert and encounter the silence.