When there is no soul-searching, is the soul still there?
from The Sacredness of Questioning Everything by David Dark

We'll build new traditions in place of the old
'Cause life without revision will silence our souls
from "Snow" by Sleeping at Last

Saturday, December 10, 2011

LIGHT

As a good ol' Lutheran girl, I should be able to write a whole post without much effort about the season of Advent and the significance of light as a symbol in this time of anticipation and hope, but I need to revisit my traditions... All I will say, is light is a beautiful symbol. A good hint to anyone needing a boost in a high school English class is "Look for light and dark imagery and symbolism!" From The Scarlet Letter to Heart of Darkness, that light and dark symbolism stuff is sure to impress on an AP exam, right?


I think it's more than just a tired literary trope, though. I think it's part of our DNA from the very dust of Eden... I mean wasn't the first recorded command of God "Let there be light"?


The theme of light in the darkness stretches throughout the Bible and is sung about beautifully in contemporary music. I want to dedicate the rest of this post to some of the lines about light currently  captivating my thoughts...


And God said, “Let there be light,” and there was light. 
God saw that the light was good, and he separated the light from the darkness.Genesis 1:3-4



The true light that gives light to everyone was coming into the world.
John 1:9



Therefore, if your whole body is full of light, and no part of it dark, it will be just as full of light as when a lamp shines its light on you.
Luke 11:36

For you were once darkness, but now you are light in the Lord. Live as children of light.
Ephesians 5:8


The people walking in darkness have seen a great light; on those living in the land of deep darkness a light has dawned.
Isaiah 9:2


When Jesus spoke again to the people, he said, “I am the light of the world. Whoever follows me will never walk in darkness, but will have the light of life.”
John 8:12


Oh great light of the world
Fill up my soul
I’m half a man here
So come make me whole
Oh great light of the world
Come to impart
The light of your grace
"Great Light of the World" by Bebo Norman


It's been a long long time
Since I've known the taste of freedom
And those clinging vines
That had me bound, well I don't need 'em
Cause I can see the light of a clear blue morning
I can see the light of a brand new day
I can see the light of a clear blue morning
And everythings gonna be all right
It's gonna be okay
"Light of a Clear Blue Morning" by Dolly Parton

Reignite

It puts an unwanted emphasis on how we should have lived. 
Life is a gorgeous, broken gift. 
Six billion pieces waiting to be fixed. 

The smartest thing I've ever learned is that I don't have all the answers, 
just a little light to call my own. 
Though it pales in comparison to the overarching shadows, 
a speck of light can reignite the sun and swallow darkness whole. 

(See my current favorite book of the Bible, Ecclesiastes, for commentary from a king gifted with wisdom, on the subject of the impossibility and vanity of searching for "all the answers.")

I keep finding more and more truth and beautiful freedom in that fact-- the fact that I don't have all the answers-- and not in a complacent, no longer searching way and surprisingly not in a postmodern all-the-answers-are-relative-and-what-is-truth-anyway? sort of way either... it's more like seeing that I don't have all the answers, but I do have one answer... one truth... and it is enough. It is only a little light... like the Advent candles lit one by one to represent the hope we have as we look for our God to come and dwell with us, but it is a speck of light that can reignite the sun and swallow darkness whole.


I want to start embracing the gorgeous in the gorgeous broken gift of life again. I want to remember and meditate on the Savior that made the world and life to be gorgeous, came to live in the gorgeous world that we made broken, and was broken so we could again be made gorgeous. I want to be embraced by, feel indwelling in my heart, and radiate from my very being the redemption that the coming of God to us promises. 

We're all just broken pieces. But the light is coming. The light is here. The light is warm and illuminating, and when it comes in full, we will be able to see clearly.... no longer straining to understand love like trying to gaze at an image obscured in a mirror but seeing clearly in the light of Him, in the light that fills the emptiness, dispels the dark, and makes the broken whole.

Come, Lord Jesus.


How should I live but as one who has the promise of such a light and a redeemer as Jesus?


Life is a gorgeous, broken gift.

Death is promised to the bee whose sting protects the colony. 
Was its life worth nothing more than honey for the queen? 
Life is a branch and it is a dove, handcrafted by confusing love. 
Sign language is our reply, when church bells make no sound. 
In hollow towers and empty hives, we craved sweetness with a fear of heights. 
Was it all just a grain of sand in an hourglass? 


The smartest thing I've ever learned is that I don't have all the answers, 
just a little light to call my own. 
Though it pales in comparison to the overarching shadows, 
a speck of light can reignite the sun and swallow darkness whole. 


Death is a cold, blindfolded kiss. 
It is the finger pressed upon our lips. 
It puts an unwanted emphasis on how we should have lived. 
Life is a gorgeous, broken gift. 
Six billion pieces waiting to be fixed. 
Love letters that were never signed, sent to where we live. 


The sweetest thing I've ever heard is that I don't have to have the answers, 
just a little light to call my own. 
Though it pales in comparison to the overarching shadows, 
a speck of light can reignite the sun and swallow darkness whole.

Saturday, December 3, 2011

C. S. Lewis The Great Divorce: Reflection

incomplete draft written several weeks ago, posted here as written originally


Oh, to be a genius like C. S. Lewis and to be clever enough to conceive something like The Great Divorce, a novel about a bus ride from heaven to hell. 


I'm reeling from all the thoughts Lewis spins into the fabric of the story, wondering who I am in the story (or perhaps, better, who I am not). I am frozen simultaneously in despair at the inherent brokenness of humanity the story illuminates and in awe at the grace and redemption the story paints as something so mysterious, so clear, and so real I yearn for it.


The story is told through conversations between those who are visiting heaven from hell and  inhabitants of heaven trying to convince them to stay. No one ever does stay, though; everyone chooses to go back to the bus and back to hell. And, amazingly, I think most of us make the same choice every day.


The two following condensed conversations represent me the most, I think, but every sketch has far too close a likeness to me for my liking...


The Elder Brother (See Tim Keller Prodigal God), the Earner of His Way
'I haven't got my rights, or I should not be here [heaven]. You will not get yours either. You'll get something far better. Never fear.' 'I'm a decent man and if I had my rights I'd have been here long ago and you can tell them I said so.' 'You can never do it like that... And it isn't exactly true, you know? You weren't a decent man and you didn't do your best. We none of us were and none of us did. Lord bless you, it doesn't matter. There is no need to go into it all now.'  
This was the substance of my first spiritual milestone in my life, around the age of 11 or 12 in Confirmation class. I always felt things inside me grind against each other when I heard the parable of the workers coming at different times of the day; it defied all my logic that God would give equally to those who did not work equally. I can see myself, even as a child, as a snippet from an old Shirley Temple movie when she asserts with a pout, "I'm very self-reliant. My mother taught me always to be that way." I can see myself, rooting on the heroes of Rand novels for their individuality and reliance on and love of self. "I recognize the right of no man to one minute of my time," Roark testifies, and I applaud his virtue of selfishness where selfishness means being firm in one's convictions and in need only of oneself and no other. But it's all a delusion to think that one can be totally self-reliant, that one can be good enough. That kind of thinking is accompanied by a life of justifying why one is truly good enough, why one has done exactly what should be done in all ways in all instances. It's impossible without embracing the idea that anything you choose to be right is, in fact, right. As in vogue an idea as that is, don't the very laws of nature contradict it? Don't all our senses of what is good and acceptable cry out that things are either right or not? Somewhere deep down in our humanity, we know there has to be something that is right and true, or we wouldn't have to come up with so many reasons for why our right or truth or lack thereof  is the correct right and truth. But I don't know how I arrived at this sentence... back to my original thought: the astounding thing that I realized at 11 or 12 was that my natural inclination was to assume that I was one of the workers to work all day. I was one of the ones who deserved what I got, and surely, if someone who worked only an hour was to get the same amount that I did, I should at least get a bonus. That's only fair... but at 11 or 12 my idea of what "fair" means was radically altered. Fair-- our whole country is based on the ideal of what is fair and what is the right of every person. We live in fear in public education of accidentally giving something to one that is not given to another, and we don't do anything-- take field trips, give rewards, have fundraisers-- that could be construed as unfair. My kids at school know the word oh-so-well and complain all the time that something is not fair when what they really mean is that something did not go their way, regardless of whether it was actually fair. But who really wants fair? We all say we want to be treated fairly, but that's only because we assume that what we have done in life and who we are merits treatment that we desire. But we think too highly of ourselves. Universally. We think we deserve all when we deserve nothing. I have had to realize that of myself many times in my life and embrace again and again the "beauty of grace," as Relient K sings, that "makes life not fair." I love the promise the Spirit makes in this passage: You will not get yours [rights] either. You'll get something far better. Why is it that we puny humans think we know what we want and what is good for us? Something far better is promised...

The Intellectual
'I am perfectly ready to consider it. Of course I should require some assurances... I should want a guarantee that you are taking me to a place where I shall find a wider sphere of usefulness-- and scope for the talents God has given me-- and an atmosphere of free inquiry-- in short, all that one means by civilisation and --er-- the spiritual life.' 'I can promise you none of those things. No sphere of usefulness: you are not needed there at all. No scope for your talents: only forgiveness for having perverted them. No atmospheres of inquiry, for I will bring you to the land not of questions but of answers, and you shall see the face of God... hitherto you have experienced truth only with the abstract intellect. I will bring you where you can taste it like honey and be embraced by it as a bridegroom. Your thirst shall be quenched.'
There is a moment in the complete version of this conversation when the intellectual has completely dismissed the Spirit and rambles on, "I feel I can do a great work among them. But you've never asked me what my paper is about!" Why do I hate my job sometimes (a lot of the time/ most of the time)? Because I feel ineffective. Because I keep longing for something where I could finally do a great work. Where I could finally put my talents to use. There is always a nagging voice in my head, "You should be doing more. You were the smartest kid in your elementary school, a valedictorian, a Niswonger Scholar... so much has been given to you. So much is expected of you." There is always a scale in my mind weighing my pitiful accomplishments against those who have done so much more, all the Vanderbilt undergrads who won medals at graduation for accomplishing more in the past four years than most people do in a lifetime, other teachers who do better jobs or work in more "successful" or more "underprivileged" schools, or those who have gone home and are giving back like I'm supposed to... There is a reason I love John Mayer's question "Am I living it right?" The reason is because I know I'm not. Like this intellectual ghost, I am always trying to find ways to show that I am getting it at least partially right, and I'm always looking for the next opportunity or career that would allow me to fulfill-- finally!-- the destiny intended for me. And, then, there are always the questions. The questions. The questions. I constantly find more questions, more problems, and I fear that I am getting further and further from the answer all the time, but I don't know how to get closer to the answer when any answer I can get for one question inspires more questions in me. Oh for hope in an answer that actually exists. Most times I don't want there to be an answer for despair that I won't ever fully know it, for despair that makes me find reasons to justify not having to have an answer. But I do want an answer. And forgiveness for all the ways I perverted my talents and usefulness... perverted them into mirages of gods, idols, the things that I spend all my time trying to hone, perverted them into unworthy sacrifices, deluded into thinking if I could just use myself and what I've been given properly then my life would be justified.