“I don’t know exactly what a prayer is.
I do know how to pay attention…”
This declaration comes from Mary
Oliver's poem entitled “The Summer Day.”
Such a bold confession comes amidst her curiosity ignited by a
grasshopper who is eating sugar from her hand as the poet sits idly in a
field. I was introduced to Mary Oliver
by my preaching professor and her words have implanted themselves in my mind
ever since. I, like so many others,
struggle with prayer. How does one go
about the curious and unpredictable journey that is speaking with God? How do we continue the dialogue begun by the
Great Conversationalist who spoke amidst the chaos and brought forth goodness
and grace? Where to begin?
Sure, I’ve prayed the Lord’s Prayer
a thousand times in worship with my fellow Sisters and Brothers in Christ. Of course, as I have begun sermons I have
echoed the song of Psalm 19 that “the words of my mouth and the meditations of
our hearts might be acceptable and pleasing in God’s sight, our Rock and our
Redeemer.” But in my most intimate of
moments outside of corporate worship, as I am sitting outside my dormitory with
my pipe between my lips and my thoughts within my head, as I walk along the
paths of the retreat center where I have spent so many summers, as I recline in
a seat overlooking the shores of Lake Allatoona, so often my fervent desire to “pray”
is met with an equal and sometimes seemingly overwhelming reality that I just
don’t know where to begin.
Perhaps, as an introvert, my mind
is full of the thoughts that I have had all day long but haven’t had a chance
to process. Perhaps, as a sinner, I am
faced with the amount of my transgressions and feel unworthy to approach the
Almighty. Perhaps, as a seminary
student, I am so indoctrinated by the scholarship of faith that I forget the
intimate, spiritual, and mystical aspect of it.
Perhaps, as one so disheartened and disappointed by the rampant individualism
of modern Christianity, I have so emphasized the communal aspect of faith that
I have ignored the personal intimacy of God-speech.
Whatever the reason might be, I
struggle with prayer. And, what’s more,
I have a feeling that I am not the only one.
Mary Oliver continues her
observation by insisting that she knows “how to fall down/in the grass, how to
kneel down in the grass,/how to be idle and blessed, how to stroll through the
fields,/which is what I have been doing all day long./ Tell me, what else
should I have done?”
Perhaps, at the end of the day, you
and I must accept the most sacred of tasks of which God has ordained us to
do: pay attention. This task is both holy and unpredictable (it
is curious, isn’t it, how those two attributes tend to align themselves). It is holy in the sense that God creates us
to be separate, distinct, particular, and, perhaps most important of all,
intentional. God calls us to live like
Jacob, to recognize her presence, and find our own “Bethels” for, indeed, God
is in this place and perhaps we didn’t even know it.
Paying attention is unpredictable
because it, by its very definition, invites (or, in some cases, forces) us to acknowledge that which we
had previously not seen. Paying
attention draws me out of myself and into the moment.
For instance, at this very moment
it calls me to wonder what in God’s name has sparked the curiosity of this
obnoxious bumble bee that refuses to vacate the privacy of my space on this
wooden porch. Paying attention requires
me to address what this elegant and yet assertive hummingbird is trying to
bring to my attention as she flies directly in front of my face and hovers before
me. How does something so small harness
the power to flap those wings with such speed?
How does such energy and intensity manage to hover motionless as if
cemented in place? What is she trying to
tell me?
I don’t know exactly what a prayer
is. But I am trying to pay
attention. What will come of it? I don’t know.
If I have any assurance it is that Abram probably didn’t either. Moses certainly wasn’t planning on doing
anything but shepherding Jethro’s flock until God called him to pay attention
to the slight detail of a burning bush.
So perhaps we are called to hang on for dear life and pay attention to
this burning bush that God has given us and to be guided to places we never
knew existed.
This life may indeed be a holy and
unpredictable search to answer the question posed in the closing lines of Mary
Oliver’s poem:
“Tell me, what is it you
plan to do
With your one wild and
precious life?”
Grace and peace,
Stephen
2 comments:
"There are no uninteresting things, only uninterested people." (GK Chesterton)
Your sense of the poetic in your descriptions of the world calls me to awe, not to worship the world, but indeed to really see it as I might not have before, and then to worship its Maker. Thank you.
I have felt speechless before God, too, or at least that my words are wholly inadequate, coming from unclean lips and an unclean heart, unbecoming of his majesty. I am thankful for the help of the Holy Spirit to guide me and thankful for His Word to give shape and form to what I want to say. And I am thankful that paying attention does not take away from the Great Conversation, but gives it a place to start.
May God bless your words and your ministry to open people's eyes and hearts to the world, to its Redeemer, to His Word and His ways. Grace and peace to you too, brother.
Thanks, brother! I hope you are doing well and blessings and peace to you as you continue in this "Great Conversation." I welcome your presence on this journey!
Post a Comment