Volume 55, Number 11 · June 26, 2008

Holy Restlessness

By Pico Iyer
The Religious Case Against Belief
by James P. Carse

Penguin, 227 pp., $24.95

It is not answers that pull many people into the religious life, it is questions. The person who lives deeply and enduringly with, and within, a religion often finds that he is surrounded by ever more doubts as he goes on, not convictions. In an eloquent monk like Thomas Merton, the religious impulse is almost always fired by a kind of holy restlessness, as if each time the traveler ascends a peak, he sees nothing but the larger peaks that now confront him. 'Our knowledge,' as Isaac Bashevis Singer put it, 'is a little island in a great ocean of non-knowledge.' Religion is in that regard like that other affair of the spirit and the heart, marriage. I may know my partner inside out, her habits and her gestures, and yet the more I see of her, the more I have to acknowledge how much will always lie beyond my reckoning—and in that very space of unknowing, my hunger for a continuing relationship may be quickened.



Review, 2995 words

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