This week I read a short piece by Henri Nouwen,
about how he would seek God in silence and fervently ask God to express his
love and pleasure toward him. It struck me how vulnerable Henri was to
write such a thing, not asking God to give him direction, but rather to give
him affirmation. Let's face it: it takes real courage to ask God to tell
me he loves me and hope I hear something back! Everyone wants this kind
of word from God of course, but very few would admit that publicly. It
was Nouwen at his vulnerable best.
Then today I read about Mother Teresa's regular
discipline of spending time in silence with God, and her private agony at not hearing
from God about his favor, despite her incredibly God-pleasing work. I
took a short time of silence this morning after that reading, and I have to
admit, I didn't hear from God either.
But as I did, it struck me that perhaps I was
looking in the wrong place, because I have had very many times of feeling God's
favor toward me in my life and my work, and even his superintending of my
actions. The most recent was only last week when I wanted deeply to
surprise and bless Janet to celebrate our 500th month anniversary
since we first began dating, way back during high school in November, 1971.
As we sat on a blanket at the beach at sunset,
all of the surprises having now been revealed and Janet superbly stunned, I
marveled at how God had placed extra treats directly in my path
to accentuate the experience, like the dozen red carnations I walked
right past and bought at the last minute. I didn't even have a clear plan how
I'd use or present them, but then I thought to stand each one up in the sand
circling around our blanket, like some miniature picket fence of love
encircling Janet. I'm not that creative!
I felt that God knew my desire was to bless
Janet, and he shined his favor on that desire to help make it happen beyond
what I could have planned. Some angel must have given us perfect sunny weather,
unusually majestic waves, a warm ocean, the carnations, and music I played
Janet as she opened the card, which I'd not heard in years until only the day
before, when it had moved me to tears. I somehow found the absolutely perfect
card. And Janet, knowing only that I was making some sort of surprise plan
for the evening for reasons she didn't know, wore the same perfume she wore in
high school. And some guy ten yards away took photos of us on the beach,
then voluntarily built a fire for us and left it for us to enjoy.
I was well-prepared, certainly, but beyond all
that I could do or even dream, I felt God was showing us his favor and love by
showering special blessings on us.
Then, reminiscing on the beach about our
relationship over these 41+ years since we began dating as pimpled
high-schoolers, through a 'crisis' pregnancy and the ups and downs (very few
downs, really) of life to the crescendo of that evening... We know we are not
that good, we were unqualified and unaware and have in no way 'deserved' the
marriage with which we've been blessed, the life we've had together.
Janet said, "If I die tonight, it's
OK." She called it her best date she's ever had (which maybe doesn't say
much for my performance the prior 41 years!). We felt like two kids
again, staring back at a minefield we'd just somehow safely crossed, knowing
without a doubt we couldn't have done it alone.
I'm not single, as Nouwen and Mother Teresa
were. I don't need the level of intimacy with God that they perhaps felt.
They each walked a lonely journey in rarefied air, feeling tremendous
expectations from the outside world, as special representatives of the God to
whom they clung fiercely despite it all. I've had over 40 years with a true
life partner, for which I'm inexpressibly grateful. So I don't pretend to
know or see God in the places where Henri and Teresa could not. I'm not
sure I have as much courage to ask as they did to hear God's voice, fearful I'd
be setting myself up for deep disappointment.
But I'm grateful for the many times and ways I
have in fact seen God's fingerprints, walked in footprints he'd already set
down, his hand preparing the good works God intended for me to walk in. (Eph
2:10)
I think I can relate my own experience most to
the story where Moses asks of God, "Now show me your glory." (Ex
33:18) God answers that he'll pass by, but tells Moses he'll only be able
to see God's back.
For a cyclist or a swimmer, it's known as
"drafting"--when the resistance of the water or air is reduced
because there is another rider or swimmer traveling slightly ahead of you,
"running interference for you" as it were. Last week I was reminded
once again how much pleasure I have felt from God, in my life and in my work,
when I discover I'm drafting behind him.
Cory
July 2013
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