Thursday, April 14, 2016

Sing Me A Song




“In the full light of day, and in hearing of the music of other voices, the caged bird will not sing the song that his master seeks to teach him. He learns a snatch of this, a trill of that, but never a separate and entire melody. But the master covers the cage, and places it where the bird will listen to the one song he is to sing. In the dark, he tries and tries again to sing that song until it is learned, and he breaks forth in perfect melody. Then the bird is brought forth, and ever after he can sing that song in the light. Thus God deals with His children. He has a song to teach us, and when we have learned it amid the shadows of affliction we can sing it ever afterward.”  -- Nature Lessons /MH 472.  {VSS 461.2}

We all have a pretty good idea understanding the concept of being taught lessons. From almost day one we’re dealing with them; at home as children, and then at school, as adolescents, and even later, as young adults, in college, one lesson after another. Then? We get a job. More lessons.

So it should come as no surprise that many of us approach our spiritual walk, our faith, in much the same way. We study, read, observe and apply almost everything we learn into a paradigm of learning, with God as the teacher, handing out lesson after lesson, and we as the students, trying to learn them and “make the grade”. At some point we begin to sense we have this wrong, so like any good student just trying to survive, we avoid the letter grade and go for a “Pass/Fail”.

Then we fail.

Maybe it’s a health issue, or someone dies, or someone lets you down. There are so many ways to have your heart broken in this life. I could type for ten hours straight, trying to list them all, and barely scratch the surface. But whatever the cause of our pain, we act like good students. We respond to it with our knowledge, will, study, scripture, understanding and all those lessons we’ve learned.

And it doesn’t work.

Because God has not brought you this far to teach how to think, He’s not about "head space". He wants to teach you how to sing and feel. He’s about "heart space". What if every dark moment of your life, as painful and radical as it may sound, was God covering the cage over your heart (the cage you built with your own two hands, by the twisted metal of your sins) not only so that you WOULD listen, but also so that you COULD listen. In all the noise of this world you would then hear God whispering to you a tune of surrender, patience, presence and love.

What if the only lesson we’re ever really meant to learn is simply how to sing that sweet song of grace? 

2 comments:

  1. From my favorite living theologian, whose book changed me in many ways...“The wrinkled man in the wheelchair with the legs wrapped, the girl with her face punctured deep with the teeth marks of a dog, the mess of the world, and I see - this, all this, is what the French call d'un beau affreux, what the Germans call hubsch-hasslich - the ugly-beautiful. That which is perceived as ugly transfigures into beautiful. What the postimpressionist painter Paul Gauguin expressed as 'Le laid peut etre beau' - The ugly can be beautiful. The dark can give birth to life; suffering can deliver grace.”
    ― Ann Voskamp, One Thousand Gifts: A Dare to Live Fully Right Where You Are

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  2. Wow. Great stuff Hilaree! We've all heard a thousand times that perception is everything. But when you really make the effort to apply it? Amazing sight is given.

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