Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Making Space to Notice


A few months ago, a friend of mine organized a “day of retreat” for a couple of colleagues and friends. She’d had a trying couple of months, personally and professionally, and she decided she needed a day of stillness. She graciously (and, perhaps, prophetically) invited us to come and be still with her. The day we spent at Longwood Gardens was a time of beautiful rest and refreshment in God.

I’d had a difficult few months myself; Ellie’s chronic migraines, fruitless fertility treatment cycles, and repeated fund development dead-ends had left me exhausted. My soul was numb, and everything was just blurring together. I just didn’t know it. I hadn’t taken a proper Sabbath in far too long, and I’d begun to succumb to that falsehood that so many of us depressive-types cling to – that life is just uniformly disappointing.

What I needed was a fresh view of things, a recalibration of my spiritual and emotional barometer. What I needed was God’s gift of Sabbath. After arriving at Longwood and agreeing on a lunch time, our motley little crew of retreaters dispersed to the four corners of the gardens to watch and wait upon the Lord.

With a notebook, a pen, and an open heart, I found a bench and sat. And listened. And watched. And as I simply let my mind wander I jotted down some thoughts. Here are some of the things that came to me…
“A cool breeze, but not too cool for comfort”
“I’m tucked into an alcove – snug as a bug in a rug.”
“The sensation of facing the bright sun, and colors slowly begin to wash out, even with my sunglasses on…”

As I sat on a sunward-facing bench beneath a portico by the conservatory, I tried to still my frantic spirit. As the sun shone on my face, I noticed that the contrast of colors began to fade. I gave myself to the experience, to see where it would go…

Staring straight ahead, the colors began to merge – green and blue lost their distinction, oranges and yellows grew cooler, and I felt my heartbeat slowing. Yes, I thought, I’m beginning to calm. I was beginning to listen.

“The music of the carillon, marking the time”
“The repetitious calls of the birds – are they talking to each other?”
“‘It feels so good to get out in the sun. I feel like a human being again!’ – woman pushing a stroller”
 
From the warmth of my bench, I heard this little observational gem from a passerby. And I could feel it myself. The Spirit was once more coaxing me back toward humanity. Thank God. During the prior months of infrequent Sabbath, as my desire and will for meaningful rest and reorientation towards God faded, I’d become something less than an image-bearer of God. When friends saw me, they saw someone weary and heavy burdened. I needed to become human again, and the stillness and sunshine we helping.

“The trickle of water – melting? Possibly snow or rain draining from higher ground as the sun warms the earth.”
“The distant sound of traffic – life moving on beyond this oasis.”
“The permeating acidity in my mouth from too many cups of coffee”
 
As I sat contemplating my inner life and spiritual numbness, I became aware of another sensation. I’d had a cup of coffee on the way out (ok, four cups), and I could taste a bitterness in my mouth I’d not noticed before. It took me setting aside the time to just sit and pay attention to my “inner world.” Why do I drink so much coffee anyway? Is the bitterness unpleasant? What other “bitter” things are in me right now? (Do I even dare ask that question?!)
“The smooth, warm grain of the wood as I sit on this bench. It’s well crafted – sturdy, heavy, solid, well maintained.”
“The smell of damp wood and flowers”
“Lovely, subtle smell – what is that? Green, dense, can’t quite comprehend it.”
 
It was so nice to be outside, surrounded by green, living things. I was amazed at how something so subtle, so easy to overlook, as the simple smell of growing things could be so comforting – intoxicating, even. Are there other things I’m not noticing?

It was such a slow, lovely day, and there’s too much else I could write about it. But I won’t. I want you to go, be still, take a Sabbath, and just let the lovely subtlety of God’s creation reveal itself to you, and in the process, reveal yourself to you also.

But lest you think it was all navel-gazing, serious introspection, here are some photos of my friends and I with a dragon sculpture we found. Hilarity ensues!


Monday, April 9, 2012

The Action of Faith

My friend Laura asked me to write a guest post about faith on her blog, Fresh Perspectives. This is an expanded version of that article.

In Mark 1, a group of men bring a paralyzed man to Jesus for healing. The problem is, a lot of others had the same thought, so when they get to the house where Jesus is staying, they can't get through the crowd. But these men are undeterred. Rather than give up, they climb to the roof and dig through it. Upon digging through, the text says that “Jesus saw their faith…”

We learn two things about faith here:

  1. Faith can be seen. It's active and obvious. The men in the story have faith that Jesus can help their friend, so they naturally take tangible, bold action based on that faith. For them, faith looked like falling bits of plaster, the sound of digging, and a badly damaged roof. What might faith look like for you?
  2. The object of faith is harder to see. These men had no guarantee that Jesus would heal their friend. In fact, the far more likely outcome would be a lawsuit for destroying private property. Regardless, they envisioned a near-future that was not guaranteed - one in which their friend walks home, carrying the cot that had carried him there. This future was dependent on Jesus curing him of an incurable affliction.

As the writer of Hebrews writes, “Faith is confidence in what we hope for and assurance about what we do not see.” (11:1)

The men in the story move confidently on a hope, modeling for us a fundamental, essential paradox. Living faithfully means living as if the kingdom of heaven were here, even when all the evidence is to the contrary. It means trusting the providence of our Lord Jesus, though we can't see his invisible hand. It means hoping for the impossible, and living as if it were inevitable.

The men in this story show a tangible faith by trusting Jesus for an impossible healing. And Jesus delivers, even exceeding their grandest hopes. What tangible faith is Jesus beckoning you toward?