Mother Siluana Vlad was a Romanian Orthodox nun, abbess, speaker, and spiritual counselor known for combining Orthodox spirituality with insights from psychology and emotional healing. She became widely influential in Romania through retreats, conferences, and books that addressed suffering, trauma, inner wounds, relationships, and the search for God in contemporary life.
God, Where Is the Wound? is a spiritually and psychologically oriented reflection on human suffering, inner brokenness, and healing through relationship with God. Based on a series of talks, the book argues that the deepest wounds are not merely external injuries caused by others, but distortions within the human heart and inner life.
I found the reading rich and inspiring while, at the same time, struggling with a degree of conceptual looseness, over-layering, unclear definitions, and a tendency to move rapidly between theological, psychological, mystical, and quasi-scientific language without sufficient clarification. An important factor to consider, however, is that the book is transcribed from talks and conferences, not written as a tightly argued theological text. Spoken language can feel powerful in person because tone, emotion, and spiritual presence carry much of the meaning.
Mother Silouana’s central insight is that prayer is not merely an act but a way of being—a life lived in communion with God that gradually transforms one’s relationship to suffering, fear, thought, and existence itself.
She describes leaving behind a life of “cleverness” that led to unhappiness and entering instead a life of worship “in the profound sense of the word.” Listening to chanting during a funeral service brought her to what she experienced as another form of understanding—beyond words and ordinary logic:
“I couldn’t remember the things I understood because that language was utterly foreign to my language. That’s how I learned theology! Or better said that’s how God taught me theology.”
This was not simply a higher level of understanding for her, but a direct experience of God that transformed the way she learned, planned, thought, and felt.
At the heart of the book is the conviction that “living theology” happens through prayer—a direct dialogue with God that transforms suffering rather than merely explaining it.
Mother Silouana begins not with doctrine or abstract moral instruction, but with pain. She sees sin, as the Orthodox tradition often does, not primarily as legal transgression but as illness, addiction, and enslavement to the passions. One of the book’s strongest insights is her exploration of our strange attachment even to suffering itself. She tells the story of a monk chastising a demon for dragging a Christian by a chain. The demon responds:
“Don’t you see that I am only dragging the chain, but he is holding on to it?”
She applies this insight to the human tendency to cling to resentment, destructive relationships, addictions, and fantasies of revenge even while knowing they are destroying us.
Yet it is also here that I began to struggle with aspects of her style and method.
Mother Silouana attempts to weave together:
- neuroscience,
- psychology,
- patristics,
- trauma theory,
- genetics,
- emotional healing,
- and Orthodox spirituality.
At times this synthesis is illuminating. At other times, the various frameworks are introduced so rapidly and with so little clarification that the conceptual structure begins to feel unstable. She often moves between spiritual illness, psychological trauma, emotional states, ontology, grace, neuroscience, ancestral wounds, and therapeutic healing without clearly distinguishing the categories or explaining how they fit together.
As a result, her insightful attempt to connect the spiritual and physical dimensions of human life can sometimes drift toward simplistic cause-and-effect explanations. A child who experiences suffocation, for example, discovers that an ancestor had been guillotined. Cancer, she claims, is usually connected to personal or ancestral sin.
Here the narrative begins to feel over-layered, as multiple explanatory systems are introduced in rapid succession without being fully integrated. Later discussions involving St. Gregory Palamas’ distinction between created and uncreated energies add another conceptual layer to an already dense framework.
Yet beneath this conceptual looseness lie moments of genuine spiritual and psychological insight.
One of the book’s most beautiful ideas is that Christianity does not ask us to reject our humanity, emotions, desires, or suffering, but to transform them:
“Our whole life into an offering to God—every experience, every feeling, every emotion, every thought, every action, every desire…”
What remains most compelling in Mother Silouana is not conceptual precision but the bearing of her heart and her invitation into an experience that ultimately exceeds language. There is an uncomfortable tension throughout the book between the directness of her mystical experience and the conceptual confusion created by the many explanatory systems she brings to bear in trying to communicate it.
Yet perhaps that tension itself reveals something important: mystical experience is often clearer in the heart than in language.
Mother Silouana addresses emotional suffering directly and compassionately. She speaks in modern psychological language rather than abstract dogmatic formulas. Rather than persuading primarily through systematic clarity, she invites the reader to partake of a peace and inner transformation rooted in union with God.