Reading was an important part of every meal—so important that Benedict insisted the reader be chosen with care. The words were not merely to be pronounced correctly; they were to be offered beautifully, so that they might instruct the mind, awaken the imagination, and nourish the soul. Reading was not performance. It was ministry.
The struggle to unite prayer and study has been with humanity for quite some time—he said with a smile.
Some people are naturally drawn to Scripture. They delight in tracing its history, examining its language, and discovering connections between one passage and another. Others find it remarkably easy to pray—to speak with God in gratitude, sorrow, wonder, or need—but feel a quiet reluctance when someone says, “Now sit down and study the Bible.”
I know something of that reluctance.
I can read Sister Joan and immediately feel that a door has opened. I can follow Richard Rohr into the mystery of transformation or sit quietly with Henri Nouwen as he explores the wounds and longings of the human heart. Their words seem to meet me where I am. Scripture can sometimes feel more distant: an ancient world of unfamiliar customs, difficult histories, troubling passages, and voices that do not always yield their meaning easily.
Must we then stop praying until we become better students? Surely not. Prayer is the breath of the soul. No one should be told to hold their breath.
But neither should we imagine that prayer alone is sufficient.
Left entirely to ourselves, we may gradually begin praying only to the God we have created—the God who agrees with us, confirms us, comforts us, and never contradicts us. Scripture introduces another voice into the conversation. It places before us a God who consoles, certainly, but who also questions, disturbs, commands, forgives, overturns, and calls us beyond the narrow borders of the self.
The ancient teachers understood this. They did not approach Scripture primarily as a textbook to be mastered. They approached it as a place of encounter. Origen believed that beneath the surface of the sacred text there waited a deeper meaning for the patient seeker. Augustine heard Scripture as a voice calling him home. Gregory the Great compared it to a river shallow enough for a lamb to walk through and deep enough for an elephant to swim in.
Benedict’s answer was lectio divina: not hurried reading, not intellectual conquest, but slow, receptive attention. Read a few words. Listen. Notice what stirs. Remain with the phrase that will not release you. Respond to God. Then become still.
Perhaps our resistance begins to soften when we stop telling ourselves that we must “study the Scriptures” and instead allow ourselves simply to sit beneath them—as one sits beneath an old tree, not understanding its every branch, but grateful for its shade.
Sister Joan and the other spiritual writers we love are not alternatives to Scripture. At their best, they are companions who lead us back to it. They help us hear what familiarity, difficulty, or fear has prevented us from hearing. Their writing is kindling, but the deeper fire was burning long before them—in the psalms of longing, the cries of the prophets, the parables of Jesus, the bewilderment of Job, the tenderness of Ruth, and the startling promise that light continues to shine in darkness.
Prayer without Scripture may become a fire without fuel—warm for a while, but gradually consuming only itself. Scripture without prayer may become a pile of wood carefully measured, labeled, and arranged, but never set alight.
We need both.
The seed of the giant redwood contains within itself an astonishing promise. Yet when it falls upon stone, that promise may remain unopened. It needs the dark hospitality of soil, the hidden work of moisture, and the steady warmth of light.
Prayer may be the seed already alive within us.
Scripture is the soil into which it falls.
The writings of wise companions are the gentle rain.
And grace—grace is the mysterious warmth by which what has long lain dormant finally begins to rise.
Read only until one word notices you.
Carry that word into silence.
Do not struggle to create the flame.
Offer the kindling—
and wait for God to breathe.