
In a recent video, British philosopher Tim Freke shared one of those ideas that is simple to hear but difficult to live: “The more you assume, the more chance you can be wrong.” If we cling too tightly to our ideas about the world, we may discover—sometimes painfully—how far they are from the truth.
Of course, we depend on assumptions to understand life: who we are, what others think, how the world works, and even what God or the meaning of existence is supposed to be. This is both natural and necessary. But when we build our world on unexamined beliefs, we risk creating a structure that is fragile and unstable.
A powerful image from László Krasznahorkai’s recent Nobel Prize in Literature acceptance speech reinforces this warning. Krasznahorkai spoke of “new angels who not only have no wings but also have no message at all,” angels who walk among us dressed like ordinary people. They bring neither revelation nor hope.
Krasznahorkai even suggests that these silent angels “may no longer be angels,” because their presence does not comfort—it unsettles. They remind us that we live in a time without divine messages but full of war, power, empty promises of progress, and the erosion of human dignity. These new angels are mute, offering no message whatsoever.
This is where the ideas of Freke and Krasznahorkai intersect. When reality confronts our assumptions, we experience what Krasznahorkai calls shock. The mute angel appears before us and strips away our stories.
Philosophically, we once imagined angels as messengers from heaven, symbols of certainty and meaning. Today our “messengers” may be technology, politics, markets, or charismatic leaders—figures we assume will guide or save us. But when we look closely, we find no clear message and no true direction.
On the psychological level, this silence exposes how much we rely on comforting narratives. We assume that someone wiser has a plan, that society knows where it is going, that history naturally moves toward something better.
On the spiritual level, the moment is even deeper. The old angel delivered a message; the new angel waits for one. The silence challenges us to listen rather than cling to certainties. Freke warns that if we insist on our old ideas about God, the world, or the purpose of life, we may fall into despair when those ideas fail.
This challenge becomes more urgent when we consider shared assumptions—those beliefs that a community or a nation takes for granted. For example, we assume that progress is inevitable. Or we assume that “someone else will take care of everything,” weakening our sense of responsibility. Or we assume our group is right, and in doing so justify exclusion or even violence.
Freke warns us about building life on assumptions. Krasznahorkai shows what happens when those assumptions collapse. Together they suggest that meaning today may not come from waiting for a message, but from becoming the message we want to share based on lived truth, dignity, and compassion.





