Simone Weil, a French philosopher and mystic, discusses the role of attention in prayer, faith, and love. She explores the power of grace, the significance of solitude, and the joy of observing the night sky.
12:39
forum Ask episode
web_stories AI Snips
view_agenda Chapters
auto_awesome Transcript
info_circle Episode notes
insights INSIGHT
Attention as Prayer
Attention is the rarest and purest form of generosity and nearly a miracle when truly given.
Pure attention, infused by faith and love, is essentially prayer by another name.
insights INSIGHT
Love Is Light, Not Consolation
True love is not about consolation but about light, inspiring gratitude equally in joy and suffering.
Human fragility makes love a trembling act, reflecting profound vulnerability and strength.
volunteer_activism ADVICE
Use Attention Over Willpower
Cure your faults by the exercise of attention rather than by force of will.
Even without immediate results, persistent attention will one day flood the soul with light.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
A selection of some key pointers for meditation from Simone Weil taken from various texts and sources.
Simone Adolphine Weil (1909 -1943) was a French philosopher, mystic, and political activist. Weil received spiritual direction from a Dominican friar and learned much from the Catholic author Gustave Thibon. She was especially rooted in Neoplatonic thinking in her spiritual writings. Yet her spiritual curiosity took her far. She learned Sanskrit to read the Bhagavad Gita. She studied Mahayana Buddhism and the ancient Greek and Egyptian mystery religions. She believed that each religion, when we are within it, is true. But she was opposed to religious syncretism. She saw a blending of religions as diminishing the particularity of each tradition and the truth of that path to God. Though she learned from other faiths, she plunged deeper into her own Catholicism. For Weil, truth was deeply personal and could only be approached through deep introspection. She experienced a powerful and ecstatic experience in the same church where Saint Francis had prayed. Weil wrote intensely about spirituality, mysticism, beauty and social struggle. Her writings sought to develop the intellectual consequences of the religious experiences she was having.
🔆 These podcasts are not monetized. If you benefit from these podcasts and would like to support our nun's hermitage, there are two options to donate - via Paypal using this email address: vivekahermitage@gmail.com with PayPal or using this direct link: https://paypal.me/VivekaHermitage