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Quotes about Reflection

I think poets owe a special adoration to the third person of the Holy Trinity, for by these tongues of fire all men are made poets and philosophers, and that is the way Christ would have it on earth.
— Thomas Merton
Above all, enter into the Church's liturgy and make the liturgical cycle part of your life—let its rhythm work its way into your body and soul.
— Thomas Merton
Bells] speak to us of our freedom, which responsibilities and transient cares make us forget.
— Thomas Merton
When solitude was a problem, I had no solitude. When it ceased to be a problem I found I already possessed it, and could have possessed it all along.
— Thomas Merton
All good meditative prayer is a conversion of our entire self to God.
— Thomas Merton
People even lose their vocations because they find out that a man can spend forty or fifty or sixty years in a monastery and still have a bad temper.
— Thomas Merton
We become ourselves by dying to ourselves. We gain only what we give up, and if we give up everything we can everything. We cannot find ourselves within ourselves, but only in others, yet at the same time, before we can go out to others we must find ourselves.
— Thomas Merton
As the car was turning around to start down the avenue John Paul turned around and waved, and it was only then that his expression showed some possibility that he might be realizing, as I did, that we would never see each other on earth again.
— Thomas Merton
Let there be a place somewhere in which you can breathe naturally, quietly, and not have to take your breath in continuous short gasps. A place where your mind can be idle, and forget its concerns, descend into silence, and worship the Father in secret.
— Thomas Merton
We only know Him in so far as we are known by Him, and our contemplation of Him is a participation in His contemplation of Himself.
— Thomas Merton
It is true that God knows Himself in all the things that exist. He sees them, and it is because He sees them that they exist. It is because He loves them that they are good. His love in them is their intrinsic goodness. The value He sees in them is their value. In so far as He sees and loves them, all things reflect Him.
— Thomas Merton
But nevertheless, no man who seeks liberation and light in solitude, no man who seeks spiritual freedom, can afford to yield passively to all the appeals of a society of salesmen, advertisers and consumers.
— Thomas Merton