Friday, June 6, 2014

The Early Bird

The early bird catches the worm.
Ugh.
How many blissful late-morning breezes carrying how many whimsical, fluffy, white cumulonimbus in a dance around a warm, smiling sun have been missed because of this early rising, worm catching joy killer?
The early bird.
The mythical figure of punctuality, work ethic and persevering effort who judges me from his well stocked perch as my morning unfolds languidly and purposelessly before him.
Beneath him.
The early bird.
How I try and fall short of the glory of the early bird.
No matter my frenzy and toil, I never measure up.
Even when I get up early and accomplish so much! That early bird still seems to be judging me. I mean how many times have I laid my head down on the pillow at night feeling like I have successfully "caught the worm" so to speak.
Do we ever actually catch the worm?
For the early bird it's so simple; he gets up and catches one worm.
Is it really that simple for us?

I've been reading the sermon on the mount.
I've been reading it over and over.
I got stuck on "blessed are the meek for they will inherit the earth".
It doesn't make sense, like much of what Jesus said (no offence to you, the Author and Perfecter, the Beginning and the End... but I'm just the imperfect, somewhere in the middle reader and I don't get it).
So, I've been stuck here at meekness. Wondering all about it.
I read a definition of meekness in one concordance which says:
Meekness toward God is that disposition of spirit in which we accept His dealings with us as good, and therefore without disputing or resisting. In the OT, the meek are those wholly relying on God rather than their own strength to defend against injustice. Thus, meekness toward evil people means knowing God is permitting the injuries they inflict, that He is using them to purify His elect, and that He will deliver His elect in His time (Isa 41:17, Luk 18:1-8). Gentleness or meekness is the opposite to self-assertiveness and self-interest. It stems from trust in God's goodness and control over the situation. The gentle person is not occupied with self at all. This is a work of the Holy Spirit, not of the human will (Gal 5:23).

And I didn't get that either.

So I thought about it over and over.
Meekness is choosing to receive everything without resistance or self interest because it comes from a good God for our good.
All evil is his refinement.
His Authoring of a story that is full of Perfecting Purposes.

Meekness.
God, in control, disciplining.
When someone is chewing gum really loudly beside me.
When Shane follows the car in front of us too closely.
When I have to wait my turn.
When I am misunderstood.
When people I love let me down.
When people I love lose things and people they love.
When accidents happen.
When death and disease happen.

Blessed are the meek.

I keep reading this over and over.
Trying to understand.
Blessed are those who receive every hard, bad, painful thing as a sign of love. As evidence of family ties to Our Father.
Blessed are those who don't work toward their own interest or try to further their own gain.
Theirs is the earth.

That doesn't make any sense!
I thought it was the early bird that got the worm!
I thought it was the one who earned it!
The one with the can-do attitude.
The one with the work ethic.

Blessed are those who don't work toward their own interest, or rely on their own strength, or resist anything - be it injustice or injury - because it's all rooted somehow, in God's goodness.
They get the worm.
The earth.
(Earth worm?!)

No can-do attitude.
No early rising.
No one legging up.
No ahead of the pack getting.

There's enough, more than enough, the whole earth available for those not working to earn or capture it.
For those not bound to or grasping it.

And they don't just get it.
They inherit it.
Somehow indicating that maybe the worm was never really up for grabs.
The whole thing, the whole earth, belongs to someone, the Someone who will one day decide who gets what.
The criteria of which never seems to be a timecard.

So maybe, for now, the early bird gets his worm.
But the meek? They inherit the earth!
That sounds like something worth getting up for.

Wednesday, May 28, 2014

Caveman

The sweet, earthy scent of freshly cut grass wafts through the open window on the gentle morning breeze and greets me while I sit in contemplation. It rouses me from the quiet, inward conversation with you, closer than my breath, and I am led into the great, cosmic conversation you are having all around me. I lean in to listen. I hear the birds from their perches amid the new buds of the trees sing the song my heart wrote for you, the song we all sing and will always sing. I see the branches dancing to the joyful tune, the clouds - now parting, now coming together - to wash them in shadows and light. I see that it is good. You made it all good. And I drink in that goodness like a long awaited glass of cold water.

You invite me to seek first the kingdom.
The hidden kingdom.
The here, but not fully here, kingdom.
The treasure of great value.
The thing it was your glory to conceal.
The think it is my glory to seek out.

And you say,
My dove is hiding behind the rocks, behind the outcrop on the cliff. Let me see your face; let me hear your voice. For your voice is pleasant and your face is lovely.
Song of Songs 2:14

And I wonder, am I part of this hidden treasure of your kingdom? Am I buried somewhere in need of excavation and recovery? You say I am hiding behind rocks, concealing my face, stilling my voice. Did I run into the cave when I heard you coming, just like my mother Eve?

Oh to be this tree. To be so fully who I was created to be without the slightest hesitation, confusion or insecurity. To stand so majestic and self-assured! To be so fully occupied with worship as to not even consider myself. Oh to be this tree who knows exactly who he is and has no need of the knowledge.

I don’t know how to bare myself - like these trees. Like the morning breeze. Open and honest. But you say I am lovely. You say my voice is pleasant.

So I give you what I have, from where I hide, a caveman awaiting rescue.

Sidewalk Chalk

Musings.

The girls laboured all afternoon. Sun kissed and radiant as they played like children. Their unlikely project? Covering the concrete step, where the buskers sit, in sidewalk chalk. It was hours that they devoted - laughing as they laboured away the sunny, Sunday afternoon.
Where were the buskers that day? Maybe enjoying a Sabbath respite, letting other artists fill the streets with other kinds of art. Maybe hungover.

But today, the step is clear. Mostly clear. There lingers just the faintest outline of a rainbow, only visible to the keen and determined eye. The eye determined to see it. Everything else washed away. All the rest disappeared into the street with last night’s deluge of rain. All the rest just vanished like the notes of the song now playing, caught up in the wind before anyone got a chance to enjoy them.

But the busker plays them anyway.

I guess it makes me wonder, what is it all for? The chalk on the step? The song in the wind?
Something in me is awakening, yearning, leaning, pressing, longing.
Something in me is tapping my foot.
Something in me is picking up this soundless melody - perceiving invisible colours - dreaming intangible dreams.

What is it all for? Too hard to say. Too impossible to say. To limiting to try.
I just want to be a part of it.
I want to be a part of making things beautiful, even if it can’t last forever.
I want to offer something that might disappear into the breeze, or run down the drain.

But I am scared to.

I am scared to let beauty live in the eye of the beholder and not chronicled in some folder for posterity. I am scared to let Margo say her first word only to have it caught up in the wind - a first fruits sacrifice. I want to save every moment, every wave, every babbled nonsensical word, every wet, open-mouthed kiss. Every cuddle. Every brave attempt at standing. I want to canonize her life - recording and curating her. Making sure I don’t miss anything. Don’t lose anything.

But she is slipping through my fingers. Shapeshifting before my eyes, shedding the very skin I’m aching to kiss forever as she outgrows it. And she isn’t mine. She doesn’t belong to me. She’s like the sidewalk chalk on the busker’s step. She’s like this song on the wind. The more I try to memorize the less I actually hear. The more I try to save the more clearly I see every note caught up in the wind as it floats through the trees and out over the ocean

I’m scared to spend myself and have nothing to show for it. Nothing left over. I’m scared to dream these big dreams because they reach as far as the stars - stars I could never hold in my hands and keep.

But. What else is there?
But. I’m just a wisp of smoke anyway. Here today. Gone tomorrow.
No matter how much I record.
So maybe it’s in the letting go I am remembered.
So maybe it isn’t saving every moment that will show Margo that she is loved. Maybe it’s not in the holding on.
Maybe in the letting go, maybe in the wasting, the spending, the throwing into the wind, the faint impression of my life’s love, poured out in reckless abandon, could still show up somewhere, hidden in her, when the sun hits her just right.