As a result of an e-mail
conversation about something on my blog, poet and preacher J. Barrie Shepherd
sent me his delightful book, Whatever Happened to Delight? Preaching the Gospel in Poetry and Parables. It
inspired me to reclaim excerpts from a reflection I wrote for a Christian
poetry spiritual formation course, which here I blend with thoughts from Barrie's book, properly credited in text.
The
road not taken. The poet Robert Frost’s famous line has been used so often,
many think of it as a cliché. But it yet carries poetic power, because many, if
not most, if not all of us have roads not taken in our lives, roads whose
destinations are hidden from us, just as the lion Aslan explains to the
children in The Narnia Chronicles that
we are not told what might have been.
In
college I was a double major: English Literature and Religious Studies. I loved
literature but I loved God more, and though literature might have been the
safer path for someone who was gay, introverted, and a writer, the devotion,
service, and activism of ministry was the higher calling and I went on to
seminary and ministry.
Let us risk the wildest places,
Lest we go down in comfort, and despair.
Mary
Oliver writes this about the explorer Magellan.
I
confess literature and religion have never been that far apart for me, nor in
reality. Both are at their best when they tell a story. Both are at their best
when, even deconstructed or dymythologized, they reveal a better, deeper, and
more meaningful story.
Analysis
reveals the parts—the bones, the sinews, the surfaces—without breathing life
into the whole, without giving it a heart that pumps life through the body,
without creating soul. Just as a human skeleton hanging in a medical classroom
is far from life as we know it, theology worked out on paper or chalkboard or
worse, by church votes, loses its liveliness when it is far from the story, the
myth, the Word made flesh.
“If
God had wanted to appeal directly to our minds, Mary would have written a book
instead of bearing a child,” Barrie quotes The
Ironic Christian’s Companion by Patrick Henry.
My
youthful poetry expressed my passionate, earnest self. My early prose wanted to
tell a story—often my story, disguised. Novelist Saul Bellow has said that
“Fiction is the higher autobiography.” The most puzzling comment I received
from a reader of my first (unpublished) novel was, “What are you trying to
say?” I wasn’t trying to “say” anything so much as tell a story.
Barrie
mentions Ruben Alves’ observation “that the verbs ‘to explain’ or ‘to
explicate’ come from Latin roots that mean to flatten, to spread out, to make
level,” and then quotes Peter Gomes to the effect that at first, in preaching,
he felt called to explain, and later to
apologize, but only toward the end of
his preaching career to celebrate
“the holy mysteries of the faith.” Gomes concludes, “We are saved by our
metaphors, not our metaphysics.”
My
poetry became liturgies and my prose became sermons and subsequently, a dozen
published non-fiction books focused on the biblical stories, stories of others,
and my own stories. Along the way I’ve written four unpublished novels as well,
the last of which is my life revisited, as if I had pursued “the road not
taken,” resisting ministry and writing fiction.
Writing
is my central spiritual discipline. Kathleen Norris considers writing her form
of lectio divina. This is where and
when and how I figure out the why and the who. Spiritual pilgrims once meandered
here and there on their way to holy sites, and that’s what I do, in words,
hoping that I might happen onto a sacred place or two in the process, perhaps
encounter God, or the Word made flesh, or the Spirit’s pentecostal gift.
I
do not outline beforehand, I do not “plan” the outcome, but “wait for the Lord”
and the serendipitous gifts of water from rock, manna from sky, quails
overhead, a still, small voice or “the sound of sheer silence,” the
providential beauty of lilies, the thrill of promised land, the in-breaking commonwealth
of God, the birthpangs of all creation. Like Emily Dickinson, I don’t need to
go somewhere to witness these wonders—I experience them in my room, in my case,
a tiny office off the garage with windows to see outside.
And,
according to Barrie, “Emily Dickinson once wrote in a letter to a friend that
‘consider the lilies of the field’ was the one commandment she had never
disobeyed.”
“We are put on earth a little space that we
may learn to bear the beams of love,” the mystical poet William Blake wrote. Oliver includes an homage to Blake in her poem
The Swan, declaring,
The path to heavendoesn’t lie down in flat miles.It’s in the imaginationwith which you perceivethis world,and the gestureswith which you honor it.
Thank
God for poets and visionaries, artists and children, cooks and gardeners, mystics
and musicians, scientists and writers, professors and preachers, mentors and colleagues,
contemplatives and activists, who have helped us, who have helped me, see the
big picture, the grand scheme, the expanding universe, the enlarging heart—and
where I belong.
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Copyright © 2016 by Chris R. Glaser.
Permission granted for non-profit use with attribution of author and blogsite.
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There is too much wonder and beauty in this. Thank you for sharing so much. And so faithfully. I saw your raw hurt woundedness this morning for first time in a way i knew but had not felt was withstood and lived with in the same way of "mere mortals". LOL I do not rejoice about it so much as stand in awe even more for your life's ministries. Thanks
ReplyDeleteThanks,Chuck. Sorry it took so long to publish your comment. I've been helping day and night this week with a spiritual formation course and unable to do my blog work. I suppose you refer to my comments on the election on Facebook. I may write of my woundedness on the blog next week. Thanks for your affirmation!
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