Updated 12:47 pm.EST, Sun November 22, 2009

Opinion|Tue, Jun. 16 2009 09:10 AM EDT

'Where Do All the Colors Go at Night?'

By R. Albert Mohler, Jr.|Christian Post Guest Columnist

One of the most lamentable aspects of modern life is the disappearance of silence. Throughout most of human history, silence has been a part of life. Many individuals lived a significant portion of their lives in silence, working in solitude and untroubled by the intrusion of constant noise.

Historians often point to the Industrial Revolution as a great turning point in the human experience of environmental sound and constant noise. The arrival of the factory and the concentration of human populations in cities brought a transformation that was accompanied by increased noise and the displaced silence. Today, the problem of noise pollution is a matter of concern to many of us, who find our lives frequently interrupted by unwanted sounds and constant noise.

Our culture now assumes noise and the constant availability of music, electronic chatter, and entertainment. In many homes, there is virtually no silence - at least during waking hours. In some homes, family members live in isolated environments of independent sound, with iPods, televisions, radios, and any number of other technologies providing a customized experience of noise.

All this takes a toll upon the soul. Psychologists argue that the development of individual identity requires extended periods of solitude, reflection, and silence. The Christian tradition has honored silence as a matter of spiritual discipline and an intentional effort to flee the noise of everyday life in order to hear what noise cannot supply.

If this is true for adults, it is perhaps even more true for children. But today's children are often subjected to a constant barrage of noise. Many are raised to the soundtrack of the television or other forms of entertainment. Some parents seem to fear silence and do their best to make certain that children are never without some form of sound.

Writing in the June issue of Standpoint, Susan Hill argues that our children are being impoverished by being deprived of silence. We have betrayed children, she asserts, by "confiscating their silence." As she explains:

But so difficult has it become to find such oases of silence, that many children never experience it. In adapting to constant noise, we seem to have become afraid of silence. Why? Are we afraid of what we will discover when we come face to face with ourselves there? Perhaps there will be nothing but a great void, nothing within us, and nothing outside of us either. Terrifying. Let's drown our fears out with some noise, quickly.

Most of us will quickly realize the truth contained in her assessment. It seems that many of us are, to a greater or lesser degree, almost afraid of silence. Our children quickly inherit the same fear.

In "Silence, Please," Susan Hill describes the delights of silence in a way that beautifully captures what so many have lost:

In a quiet library, the turning of a page, the scratch of pencil on paper, are separate, distinctive, sounds. They identify themselves to us, they have a personality. They are beautiful. It is not only natural sounds that gain a richness set in the context of silence - all sounds do. To deprive ourselves and our children of the ability to distinguish such aural detail is to diminish our sensory life.

As Susan Hill acknowledges, complete silence is very difficult to achieve. Her goal is not to see children experience an artificial silence, but instead to see children experience the natural sounds that come as gifts - sounds that require turning off the television to hear. Continue »

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  • Wed Jun 17, 2009 12:11 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    I think it was Blaise Pascal who said that much of man's problems can be traced to his inability to sit still in a room.Regardless of whether one agrees with that statement or not, there is something to be said for the discipline of silence.God is still saying "Be Still and know that I am God"(Psalm 46:10), but we are too busy and too loud to hear Him.This is one of my favorite verses,and yet I find myself being guilty of not taking enough time to be still in His presence.

  • Wed Jun 17, 2009 8:16 am Agree: 1   Disagree: 0

    Good article. My current career has me in airports quite a bit, which I believe to be the #1 places in the world with the worst total amount and number of individual competitive noises you'll find anywhere. Haven't succumbed yet to the noise canceling headsets but am close...

  • Tue Jun 16, 2009 11:13 pm Agree: 1   Disagree: 0

    I once speant a weeks silent retreat at an abbey, joining in with the monks as they lived their lives for God and sharing him with those who spent time with them, highly reccommended.

  • Tue Jun 16, 2009 3:34 pm Agree: 2   Disagree: 0

    Some years ago while acting as interim pastor for a church, I preached on the subject of noise in our society. My bottom line conclusion has not changed: Satan is the one behind our "need" for noise. With so much sound and noise around us we cannot possibly hear that still, small voice of the Lord with which He speaks to us.

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