DAVID TORKINGTON
Journalist, Author and Speaker

Home 
Publications 
Reviews
Interviews
Extracts
Beliefs
Links

Diary

Questions

Praying made simple


Published August 2008

oBooks

 

EXTRACTS FROM BOOKS

 

 INNER LIFE - A Fellow Traveller's Guide to Prayer 

The Enemy within

Brother Taurus was a man with the best of intentions but with a terrible temper that made him impossible to live with. After he had fallen out with his family he went to Tarsus to be apprenticed to a tailor. When he had frightened away half his customers the tailor had to send him away before he lost the other half. lt was then that Taurus decided to do something about his temper before it did for him. He went into the desert and found a monastery in which he could come to terms with his affliction. In less than a year the monks found his temper so impossible that he had to leave.

They gave him a fine set of earthenware pots and plates, a large jug of goat's milk and enough food for a month. Then they helped him find a cave in which to live the life of a hermit. At last he thought he could come to terms with his temper because there was no one there to try him.

It was when he was trying to light the fire that he overturned the jug and lost all his milk. Before he could control himself he picked up the jug and smashed it against the side of the cave, the pots went the next day and the plates the following day.

Brother Taurus cursed and swore but there was no longer anywhere for him to go to hide from the affliction that would have gone with him anyway. At last he had to face in solitude what he'd never faced before. It was there that he finally learnt that the trouble with the world he had run away from was not 'other people', as Sartre said, but with himself. If he wanted to live in peace with others he must first find it within himself.

St. Catherine of Siena used to say, "The trouble with the world is me!" It was a truth that she had learnt for herself in blood, sweat and tears in her solitude, not in a desert, but in her own home, in what she called "the house of self-knowledge'.

It takes a saint to see a truth so clearly that pride and prejudice prevents the rest of us from seeing. The evils of the world that we hear about daily on our radios or see on our television screens are but the outward expressions of the evil that is within us all. Yet arrogant human beings find it offensive when they are told that the source of the world's woes can be found within them. They like to think that they have no part in them, that they are out there in a place where they can be dealt with by the expertise and endeavour of 'homo sapiens.'

That's why Schumacher pointed out in his book, 'Small Is beautiful' that 'although people go on clamouring out for solutions they become angry when they are told that the restoration of society must come from within, not from without. Simplistic it may seem to the clumsy and cluttered mind of 'homo arrogans', but it is nevertheless true. There will never be peace and harmony in man's world until there is first peace and harmony in man's heart. This has been the consistent teaching of the great philosophers and religious thinkers from the beginning. All the great mystics have discovered the hard way what Job meant when he said that man's life on earth is a continual war, a war that has to be waged within. Pope John's bedside reading was 'The Spiritual Combat' from which he drew his inspiration. This man of peace and compassion only became so through many inner battles that he fought and lost, as he explained in his book 'Journal of a Soul'. It is only after losing battle after battle in the spiritual combat that a person finally learns that the 'war to end all wars' will never be won without help and strength that is quite beyond one's own resources. This was the lesson that St. Paul finally learnt. He actually thanked God for his weakness because it enabled him to realise that without God he couldn't win a single battle with himself. For St. Paul, even sinfulness can become a steppingstone to sanctity when it forces a person to turn again and again to the only One who can help him.

The way to inner peace is paved with spiritual failures and dogged by defeat after defeat. If victory ever comes it will come through humility of the broken warrior, who begs for the help and strength that he finally realises only God can give. No politician, no diplomat did more for peace in her day than did St. Catherine of Siena. Nor will anyone do more for peace in our day than those who have the courage to go within as she did and with God's help fight first with themselves for what they want to bring to others.

back to extracts

 
free web stats

home 

 This site has been designed, edited and is maintained by Bobbie Torkington 

Last updated 14 January 2009

© David torkington-2008