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Introductory notes for readers of this thesis - Theses - Flinders ...

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humanity as a spiritual guide, enabling others to experience an ‘awakening’ to themystical and relational possibilities <strong>of</strong> their graced existence. In Rahner’s mind, Ignatianspirituality also provides the means and process by which the church itself may receiveconstant direction and renewal: opening itself in humility to its ‘dynamic element’, theactive presence and voice <strong>of</strong> the Holy Spirit, engaging directly with the lives <strong>of</strong> allmembers—not just those who constitute the <strong>of</strong>ficial teaching <strong>of</strong>fice.Rahner’s spirituality <strong>of</strong> silence can be expressed in Ignatian terms as follows.1. Christianity in the first instance emerges from a posture <strong>of</strong> solitude and silent selfcontemplationin the light <strong>of</strong> God’s revelation in Jesus.Individuals willing to ‘put up with themselves in loneliness and perhaps inabandonment, there<strong>for</strong>e in silence’ 95 achieve an initial awareness <strong>of</strong> God and acapacity to participate more fully in God’s life. Silent self-reflection, in light <strong>of</strong> therevelations <strong>of</strong> the historical Jesus and essential Christian doctrine, opens the doorwayto a mystical participation in the actual life <strong>of</strong> Jesus through whom individuals findand embrace their true selves and begin to learn the meaning <strong>of</strong> prayer.If we consider what we are like in our ordinary lives, in our secret moments,we shall see that we are all desire and longing, ever on the lookout <strong>for</strong>something new and different, that we are hungry and thirsty <strong>for</strong> the goodthings <strong>of</strong> life, one cry <strong>for</strong> a fulfilment we do not yet possess…we arepractically one vast chaos <strong>of</strong> appetites…We need someone to straighten outthe tangled desires that we are, to infuse them with tranquillity and an innerlight and joy…That is why we must ask in Jesus’ name; which does notmean that we invoke him verbally and then desire whatever our turbulent,divided heart or our appetite, our wretched mania <strong>for</strong> anything andeverything happens to hanker <strong>for</strong>. No, asking in Jesus name means enteringinto him, living by him, being one with him in love and faith. If he is in usin faith, in love, in grace, in his Spirit, and then our petition [life cry] arisesfrom the centre <strong>of</strong> our being, which is himself, and if all our petition anddesire is gathered up and fused in him and his Spirit, then the Father hears96us .In the silent place—the place <strong>of</strong> Ignatian meditation, contemplation and colloquy—aperson may become present to the God who is already closer to them than they are tothemselves. The church, through the creation <strong>of</strong> a silent, sacred opportunity and the95 Imh<strong>of</strong> and Biallowons, eds., Karl Rahner in dialogue, 178.96 Rahner, K. The Great Church Year, Raffelt, A. ed. Egan, H. trans. ed. (New York: Crossroad, 1993),200-201.49

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