August 2007 Reflection
                        



In 1957, Dag Hammarskjold formalized the ideas found below in his dedication for the United Nations Meditation Room, called “A Room of Quiet”. His dedication remarks are still given today in a leaflet to people who visit the Meditation Room, which Hammarskjold founded and co-designed. The poetic inscription below, “A Room of Quiet” is inscribed on the Mediation Room wall as you enter:


                 A Room of Quiet
                 This is a room devoted to peace
                 and those giving their
                 lives for peace. It is a room of quiet
                 where only thoughts should speak.


We all have within us a center of stillness surrounded by silence. 
This house, dedicated to work and debate in the service of peace, should have one room dedicated to silence in the outward sense and stillness in the inner sense.
It has been the aim to create in this small room a place where the doors may be open to the infinite lands of thought and prayer.
People of many faiths will meet here, and for that reason none of the symbols to which we are accustomed to in our meditations could be used.
However, there are simple things which speak to us all with the same language. We have sought for such things and we believe that we have found them in the shaft of light striking the shimmering surface of solid rock.
So, in the middle of the room we see a symbol of how, daily, the light of the skies gives life to the earth on which we stand, a symbol to many of us how the light of spirit gives life to matter.
But the stone in the middle of the room has more to tell us. We may see it as an altar, empty not because there is no God, not because it is an altar to an unknown god, but because it is dedicated to the God whom man worships under many names and in many forms.
The stone in the middle of the room reminds us also of the firm and permanent in the world of movement and change. The block of iron ore has the weight and solidity of the everlasting. It is a reminder of that cornerstone of endurance and faith on which all human endeavor must be based.
The material of stone leads our thoughts to the necessity for choice between destruction and construction, between war and peace. Of iron man has forged his swords, of iron he has also made his ploughshares. Of iron he has constructed tanks, but of iron he has likewise built homes for man. The block of iron ore is part of the wealth we have inherited on this earth of ours. How are we to use it? 
The shaft of light strikes the stone in a room of utter simplicity. There are no other symbols, there is nothing to distract our attention or to break in on the stillness within ourselves. When our eyes travel from those symbols to the front wall, they meet a simple pattern opening up the room to the harmony, freedom and balance of space.
There is an ancient saying that the sense of a vessel is not in its shell but in the void. So it is with this room. It is for those who come here to fill the void with what they find in their center of stillness.


                                                

Monthly Practice:

bulletWhere are there places of stillness, quiet, and silence in your life? In what ways can your provide a daily practice or place of quiet to deeply listen or rest into stillness?
bulletSpend at least 15minutes each day in silence to allow “the light of spirit give life to matter”.




 

 
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Last modified: May 04, 2009