Thursday, 1 February 2018

THE NIGHT IS COME, LIKE TO THE DAY - SLEEP IN SIR THOMAS BROWNE 'RELIGIO MEDICI

Sir Thomas Browne
Sir Thomas Browne (1605-1682). Browne was a noted polymath and churchman and in his Religio Medici (1643), wrote a meditation on sleep that has an autobiographical and confessional sense to it.[i] The fact that Browne reflects on sleep in prayer illustrates the point that sleep is well articulated in Christian understanding in prayer, liturgy and hymnody which, along with the Bible, are the source material for a systematic theology of sleep.

Browne’s prayer (see below) is an example of a non-systematic theology of sleep that is expressed doxologically: doctrinal and Biblical references woven into prayer. It entrusts him to sleep, mindful of its pitfalls and dangers. Throughout it he references scripture and his human experience and says of sleep that it is, ‘the dormative I take to bedward’ and continues, ‘I need no other laudnam than [prayer] to make me sleep’. Browne, who we can now call a theosomniac, writes that on going to bed, ‘truly ‘tis a fit time for devotion; and therefore I cannot lay my head without an orison, and take my farewell in a colloquy with God’.

That captures the impulse to see the boundary between being awake and being asleep as a hallowed time and a time, as Browne puts it, ‘after which I close mine eyes in security, content to take my leave of the sun and sleep unto the Resurrection’. Praying before sleep, in the expectation of waking in the morning, is what Browne calls, ‘an half adieu unto the world’. Sleep is the, ‘moderating point between life and death’, yet in life and in death, the Christian conviction is whilst we sleep, in life or death, the believer’s heart wakes to God.

Browne references many of the themes that will be explored in greater depth in subsequent chapters. His meditation maps out the terrain of a Christian theology of sleep and the doctrinal markers with which we will engage. A brief analysis of the prayer will serve as an introduction to our exploration in two ways. First, there are Biblical references to which he is directly alluding. This is not an exhaustive list of Biblical references to sleep, but is a good starter. Secondly, Browne raises some fundamental theological themes: sin, seeing sleep as possibly a consequence of humanity’s fallen state; watchfulness; the abandon and vulnerability of the sleeping individual; sleep as a regenerative state, both physically and spiritually; sleep and mortality; and the sense that this worldly human condition exists in ‘drowsy days’. 

In a rich set of images Browne’s prayer exposes contradictions and paradoxes in how sleep is treated in the Bible. Importantly though he sets sleep within a doctrine of creation. The opening lines locate sleep in the creative act of God who calls light into being ‘Let there be light’ (Genesis 1.3) and frames it by day and night ‘The night is come, like to the day, / depart not Thou, great GOD, away’. There is an allusion to Christ, the Light of the World, the one who shines in the darkness, and that the darkness has not overcome (John 1.5). Given that sleep is predominantly a darkness-based activity it could be an opportunity to collude with the darkness, and recognising this Browne asks that his own sinfulness does not ‘Eclipse the lustre of Thy light’.

Darkness alludes to sinfulness in Scripture. It contrasts the children of the darkness with the children of the day.  A more lasting concern of traditional Christian approaches to the night and sleep are less about sins of commission and rather more sins of omission. Sleep represents a time of loss of control represented in the possibility that ‘dreams my head infest’. Loss of personal control raises the question of who is in control of the sleeper. Traditionally the most likely suspect is Satan: prayers that ask for protection from ‘nightly fears and fantasies’ usually have Satan in mind, or, as Browne puts it, ‘guard me ‘gainst those watchful foes, whose eyes are open while mine close’. The sense of menace is clear.

It is not that sleep is sinful per se, rather that the opportunity for sin comes through, for example, erotic dreams or sloth in the form of a surfeit of sleep. This is mitigated by the way in which sleep is prepared for. Compline opens with confession as the fall of darkness heightens the acute awareness of sin and failings throughout the past day that can be carried into the long, dark night. As Browne prays that the lustrous light of God is not eclipsed by ‘my sins, black as the night’.

Compline prepares the Christian for the profound vulnerability and abandon of sleep (the state that the evolutionary biologists cannot comprehend). Weaving together both the sense of vulnerability and God’s watchfulness, Browne pleads, ‘Thou whose nature cannot sleep, / on my temples sentry keep’. In that Browne is clearly alluding to the death of Sisera at the hands of Jael who took a hammer and drove a tent peg through his temple because, ‘he was lying fast asleep from weariness’ (Judges 4.21).

The theological assertion of the watchfulness of God - ‘Thou whose nature cannot sleep’ – derives from Psalm 127, ‘The Lord who watches over Israel shall neither slumber nor sleep’, yet equally Psalm 44 implies that God really can sleep, ‘Up, Lord, why sleepest thou, wilt thou be absent from us forever’ (Psalm 44.23). Elsewhere God is described as being aroused from sleep (78.65). Nevertheless, the conviction that God watches over the sleeper is enduringly significant. It assumes a relationship between the Creator and the creature: ‘keep still in my horizon; for to me the sun makes not the day, but Thee’. There is a sense that the watcher and the watched over have a mutual eye on each other.

Keeping watchful is not simply what God ‘does’ when a person sleeps. The believer is called to keep watch too. Sleep, as already noted, is represented both as a time of inattention and deep attention to God. Attentive sleep is primarily shown by Browne in sleep open to the possibility of dreams, ‘make my sleep a holy trance, that I may, my rest being wrought, awake into some holy thought’. Some of the literature about dreams is highly speculative and perhaps over imaginative - and it is not the purpose of this book to analyse dreams - nevertheless it would be counter to Biblical witness and human experience to dismiss the impact and power of dreams.

Icon of Jacob sleeping
and dreaming
It is not unknown that dreams, or at the very least the act of ‘sleeping on it’ can influence a decision or course of action, not unlike Joseph who woke and arose from sleep and led Mary and Jesus to safety in Egypt, having been warned in a dream of Herod’s intentions (Mathew 2.13). In that regard sleep can be the arena for theophany, a manifestation of the divine presence. Sleep is integral to the relationship between mortals and God in God’s self-communication in dreams and nocturnal revelation. That in itself is an ambiguous experience, such as Jacob experienced at Bethel (Genesis 28.10-22) ‘Let no dreams my head infest, but such as Jacob’s temples blest’. We can note that not all dreams are benign or decisive in the Bible. For example, the dreams of Saul are very unsettling and his sleep disturbed as a consequence.

Sleep can be a fearful time, especially when elusive or disturbed. There is a deeper, perhaps connected fear, which is often articulated with regard to the relationship between sleep and mortality. The notion of loss of control connects sleep with death, when all is relinquished in a time when not even dreams will happen, because sleep anticipates death, ‘sleep is a death; O make me try, / by sleeping, what it is to die; / and as gently lay my head / on my grave, as now my bed’. What if, like Sisera, I never wake again: am I prepared? Sleep also relates to the fear of a ‘sudden death’ because it means dying unprepared.

Alongside the positive imagery of light, these fears of darkness, night, sleep and associations with death gives the context to liturgical practices such as the Lucinarium and traditional prayers before bed, both for children and adults. The anticipation of death is also, for the Christian disciple, the anticipation of resurrection, ‘however I rest, great GOD, let me / awake again at last with Thee; / and thus assur'd, behold I lie / securely, or to awake or die’. In the reference to waking again Browne refers directly to sleep and the resurrection and the Christian hope that the believer will be awakened on the Last Day.

Browne speaks of a time when he will ‘never / Sleep again but wake for ever’. That reference alerts us to the eschatological dimension of sleep and the nature of time. The eschatological parables of the Kingdom often have the refrain ‘stay awake’, as does the account of Gethsemane, and sleep is an integral feature.  For example, both the attentive and inattentive character of sleep is deployed as a motif in the case of the sleeping bridesmaids who miss the arrival of the bridegroom, with all its messianic overtones (Matthew 25.1-13).

When exploring sleep it is easy to focus upon the physical act of falling asleep, the phases of sleep and what it signifies and represents. However a theology of sleep is incomplete without the flipside of the wakeful life of the day or at the very least how one wakes, and how sleep has prepared for that. For Christian theology if sleeping speaks of death and mortality, then waking says resurrection. Again Browne captures this,  ‘These are my drowsie days; in vain / I do not wake to sleep again: / O come that hour, when I shall never / sleep again, but wake for ever’. The theosomniac has to be mindful of waking as well as sleeping since sleep delivers waking, and vice versa, a virtuous circle. In other words the theosomniac does not simply focus on sleep, but rejoices in the day as a gift which then makes sense of the entrusting of the self to sleep.

The night is come, like to the day,
Depart not Thou, great GOD, away.
Let not my sins, black as the night,
Eclipse the lustre of Thy light:
Keep still in my Horizon; for to me
The Sun makes not the day, but Thee.
Thou, Whose nature cannot sleep,
On my temples Centry keep;
Guard me 'gainst those watchful foes,
Whose eyes are open while mine close.
Let no dreams my head infest,
But such as Jacob's temples blest.
While I do rest, my Soul advance;
Make my sleep a holy trance;
That I may, my rest being wrought,
Awake into some holy thought;
And with as active vigour run
My course, as doth the nimble Sun.
Sleep is a death; O make me try,
By sleeping, what it is to die;
And as gently lay my head
On my grave, as now my bed.
However I rest, great GOD, let me
Awake again at last with Thee;
And thus assur'd, behold I lie
Securely, or to awake or die.
These are my drowsie days; in vain
I do not wake to sleep again:
O come that hour, when I shall never
Sleep again, but wake for ever.

Thomas Browne. Religio Medici.

© Andrew Bishop, 2018




[i] Thomas Browne. Religio Medici. Edited by John Winney. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1963).

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