Embracing Mystery, Despite Fear
So, yet again, I have been absent. I do not have a lot to say. And really, right now, I feel God inviting me into the silence. I sense there is something for me here, some gift on the other side of this mystery.
And yet I struggle in fear. If I do not preside over this space, will I be forgotten? Will I be reduced to what little my latest string of posts have offered? So much growth has happened in this place in two and a half years. This is a place I've poured my the fullness of my journey. A place I've wrestled with questions larger than life. A place I've practiced honesty and risk. A place I've found community and grace.
But always the question: what have I offered here lately? And the answer is: not much. Although much has happened internally, it hasn't been shared here. And if it hasn't been shared here, written out for my own heart to see and for others to receive, did it really happen? Perhaps all writers ask themselves this question.
Kirk and I took a drive the other night. It was a drive along highways, lakesides, and back country roads. We called it "The Drive of Psalms" and made it a time of spontaneous prayer and confession. We talked out loud to God, and then we talked to each other. It was long and meandering and full of questions held openly and gently. Toward the end of our time together in that car, I remarked aloud, "You know this, that we've been doing here? It's got a slowness full of life. It feels like the true rhythm of our life together."
Slow. Rhythmic. Gentle and open. Questions and confession and prayer and shared hearts, with each other and with God.
A few days ago I finished my second class at Spring Arbor. It was a class on the spiritual disciplines, and it was incredibly rich, full of so many gems that I'll be mining for some time yet to come.
The capstone project for this class was a large-scale paper that explored many facets of the class: resources I'd located along the way in order to teach the material to others, meditations on Scripture and a bodily fast I'd conducted for eight weeks, and reflections on how God had been working to transform my life and heart through the practices of the past two months. It was a lengthy and deepening endeavor, and it took the whole of me to complete it.
On the night I completed it, I curled up in our recliner chair in the library nook, a lamplight burning on the table beside me, the kitties resting nearby. I opened a book I hadn't read in some time and simply embraced the quiet. As I read, my mind absorbed the beautiful story but also, from time to time, began wandering into thoughts and territories I hadn't explored for some time. It was responding to quiet, feeling the expanse and beginning to walk around in it.
I watched where it wandered and felt the goodness of doing so. I haven't offered myself much room to breathe and explore and simply turn up questions I don't rush to answer. So much of my time has felt managed, so much of my soul has felt managed, so much of my future has felt managed . . . all by hands that are my own and that feel the fear of the mystery of God.
One of the things I confessed during our drive of psalms was this self-management of my life. I worry and tend to the future and wonder just how much God wants to actively unfold it. I struggle to trust him with too much control because giving up my own worry and management of my life might mean I get left alone and out in the cold. He might not show up. He might do nothing. He might not lift a finger, and then what opportunities might I lose?
I feel something at work deep inside that I can't name or quantify. I don't know what it is. I need to let it happen. And I need to surrender what I cannot do while that work is taking place, which is, partly, keeping the content coming along the way. I simply don't know how to talk about it. Not yet. I wonder if I ever will.
Last night I was reading in Sue Monk Kidd's book When the Heart Waits, where she talks about the deep stillness the soul needs to move forward. Speaking of her own journey to embrace stillness, she says, "Overcoming my resistance to waiting meant coming to terms with the 'still journey.' I would have to give up the compulsion to keep my line moving at the world's pace. I would need to find my own pace, one that flowed with the rhythms of the earth and the Spirit, not with the frenzy of modern life. Our inner clocks tick at a much slower speed than that of society. Slowing our feet, our minds, our desires, our impulses -- stilling those things that drive us into faster and faster patteerns of living -- will help open us to the transforming experience of waiting. . . . Here's the paradox: we achieve our deepest progress standing still."
I guess all this is meant to say that I feel myself getting in touch with the true rhythm of my deep heart. It does indeed move slower than the pace of the world, and that scares me. If I respond to what is needed inside, I risk becoming irrelevant and lapsing into obscurity.
This is the tension that I face today: saying yes to my soul's true rhythm and needs, or keeping to the path that is more outward and more known.
Right now, I'm embracing the mystery of the inner journey. I pray for God to give me the grace to continue into the depths of what He is building and creating and growing inside of me, no matter how long it takes.
And yet I struggle in fear. If I do not preside over this space, will I be forgotten? Will I be reduced to what little my latest string of posts have offered? So much growth has happened in this place in two and a half years. This is a place I've poured my the fullness of my journey. A place I've wrestled with questions larger than life. A place I've practiced honesty and risk. A place I've found community and grace.
But always the question: what have I offered here lately? And the answer is: not much. Although much has happened internally, it hasn't been shared here. And if it hasn't been shared here, written out for my own heart to see and for others to receive, did it really happen? Perhaps all writers ask themselves this question.
Kirk and I took a drive the other night. It was a drive along highways, lakesides, and back country roads. We called it "The Drive of Psalms" and made it a time of spontaneous prayer and confession. We talked out loud to God, and then we talked to each other. It was long and meandering and full of questions held openly and gently. Toward the end of our time together in that car, I remarked aloud, "You know this, that we've been doing here? It's got a slowness full of life. It feels like the true rhythm of our life together."
Slow. Rhythmic. Gentle and open. Questions and confession and prayer and shared hearts, with each other and with God.
A few days ago I finished my second class at Spring Arbor. It was a class on the spiritual disciplines, and it was incredibly rich, full of so many gems that I'll be mining for some time yet to come.
The capstone project for this class was a large-scale paper that explored many facets of the class: resources I'd located along the way in order to teach the material to others, meditations on Scripture and a bodily fast I'd conducted for eight weeks, and reflections on how God had been working to transform my life and heart through the practices of the past two months. It was a lengthy and deepening endeavor, and it took the whole of me to complete it.
On the night I completed it, I curled up in our recliner chair in the library nook, a lamplight burning on the table beside me, the kitties resting nearby. I opened a book I hadn't read in some time and simply embraced the quiet. As I read, my mind absorbed the beautiful story but also, from time to time, began wandering into thoughts and territories I hadn't explored for some time. It was responding to quiet, feeling the expanse and beginning to walk around in it.
I watched where it wandered and felt the goodness of doing so. I haven't offered myself much room to breathe and explore and simply turn up questions I don't rush to answer. So much of my time has felt managed, so much of my soul has felt managed, so much of my future has felt managed . . . all by hands that are my own and that feel the fear of the mystery of God.
One of the things I confessed during our drive of psalms was this self-management of my life. I worry and tend to the future and wonder just how much God wants to actively unfold it. I struggle to trust him with too much control because giving up my own worry and management of my life might mean I get left alone and out in the cold. He might not show up. He might do nothing. He might not lift a finger, and then what opportunities might I lose?
I feel something at work deep inside that I can't name or quantify. I don't know what it is. I need to let it happen. And I need to surrender what I cannot do while that work is taking place, which is, partly, keeping the content coming along the way. I simply don't know how to talk about it. Not yet. I wonder if I ever will.
Last night I was reading in Sue Monk Kidd's book When the Heart Waits, where she talks about the deep stillness the soul needs to move forward. Speaking of her own journey to embrace stillness, she says, "Overcoming my resistance to waiting meant coming to terms with the 'still journey.' I would have to give up the compulsion to keep my line moving at the world's pace. I would need to find my own pace, one that flowed with the rhythms of the earth and the Spirit, not with the frenzy of modern life. Our inner clocks tick at a much slower speed than that of society. Slowing our feet, our minds, our desires, our impulses -- stilling those things that drive us into faster and faster patteerns of living -- will help open us to the transforming experience of waiting. . . . Here's the paradox: we achieve our deepest progress standing still."
I guess all this is meant to say that I feel myself getting in touch with the true rhythm of my deep heart. It does indeed move slower than the pace of the world, and that scares me. If I respond to what is needed inside, I risk becoming irrelevant and lapsing into obscurity.
This is the tension that I face today: saying yes to my soul's true rhythm and needs, or keeping to the path that is more outward and more known.
Right now, I'm embracing the mystery of the inner journey. I pray for God to give me the grace to continue into the depths of what He is building and creating and growing inside of me, no matter how long it takes.

9 Comments:
Wow. I responded to your Facebook comment to me before I read this. So much of what you say here resonates so deeply with me..."God is working...I don't know what he's doing, but I want him to do it...I don't want to miss this." I love you in this, and I haven't forgotten you at all...think of you often, in fact ;) Merry Christmas!
Oh.
Yes.
Indeed, sometimes the blog and the "public persona" just have to take a back seat.
I feel your fogginess these days too. Wanting God to work mightily, but also wanting to be in the know about what that mighty work is going to look and feel like. I don't like the fog very much. It's hard to see things here and it's damp and a little chilly.
But I reach out my hand just a little bit and... huh... oh.. hey, there's Christianne!
We can call ourselves the Foggy Bloggers. ;)
May the fog lift and May His glory shine in on you. you are a dear soul with Jesus!!!! peace. maranantha!!!
glad that you are back!!!!
merry and meowy christmas
I am also so very, very glad for a few days of stillness, a chance to simply observe those thoughts, God's nearness, dreams and schemes from a bit of a distance. Spending next week at my beloved retreat. You'd certainly be welcome, too! I'd try to keep quiet and give you space. :) You are dear, Christianne! May God teach you the gentle rhythms of your life!
i am so glad to hear you embracing this -- giving yourself permission to sit still and to wait. for what, who knows? and that, perhaps, is the most difficult thing of all.
not knowing what it's for.
not knowing how long the stillness will last.
not knowing how this will all turn out.
not knowing what deep work is really going on inside.
i find myself in a similar space: not having a lot to offer in a place where i was so accustomed to being prolific -- and now i find myself having nothing to say or offer or share because there is something deep and mysterious and profound occuring.
thank you for embracing this bravely and owning it deeply, even though there is some trepidation in all the aspects of not-knowing. i am with you, i am for you, and i will be here waiting when you emerge from this silence.
love you so much!!
-k
beautiful. and if you never wrote another word here you would never be forgotten. we know you by heart. and love you. hearing the movements of your heart and spirit are always so deep and rich. so divine expectancy yes, expectations no. merry christmas, friend.
Christianne- i miss you, but you are following your heart so, i think that is the most difficult beat to dance to. You should know me by now that i take what you all write and internalize it somehow and spit out the meditation. It may not fit into your blog, but it makes sense in my mind somehow. (God help.)
I have wrote a blog on this 2x, but some thoughts come pouring back while reading this blog. I think about Joseph and the really slowwww (and quite painful) process he endured before stepping into the purpose of God for his life.
My thoughts are like bullets racing in 100 different directions, this blog pulled a trigger. I would bet money that this man felt totally forgotten by God. I mean, you see there in the first few years that he is desperate to get out of prison, he strives to ensure his release and he is forgotten about.
Joesph runs out from a divine dream and declares that the world would bow down before him. Look where that little dream took him, thrown in a ditch and left to die. Sold into slavery, blah, blah, blah, you know the story.
You see all the markers in his life where he strives just to stay out of some sorta trouble. I wonder if he ever thought.........."ministry! Who cares about ministry, I am just trying to stay out of jail."
This has absolutely NOTHING to do with your blog really, but myself mostly. Lately my thoughts are, "ministry, who cares about ministry, i am just trying to stay out of hell." Me and old Joseph are kindred spirits you know.
I know that you won't mistake this for edification Christianne, that is just NOT one of my many spiritual gifts. And just to think I am going to school to become a therapist (of course that is subject to change). I may as well put a clause somewhere that states, "I waver all rights and responsibilities of suicide counseling, cause if the going gets tough..........I'll jump with you."
You think I am joking I most certainly am not. I would hang that sign on my office door. I look at it like this, if anyone continues to see me after that warning we will get along just fine.
I fully intend on being the most unorthodox therapist that has ever (maybe) been licensed to practice. Honestly, speaking of embracing mystery, despite fear..........I can't believe I just said that sentence out loud. That strange utterance makes it a little too real for my mind to adapt to right now.
So for now all I can embrace is being blown by the wind.........hopefully the wind of the Spirit.
Do you ever think Jesus wore a T-shirt that says....."if you are following Me I am lost" On the back it says "Got directions?"
I love this line...
"Our inner clocks tick at a much slower speed than that of society."
Oh yes. Ti... i.... i.... i....i....i....ck.
Yes, I know this waiting. There are aspects of my life that have been waiting. And waiting. Now, there's more waiting in new areas. Christmas may have arrived, but my advent continues. I long for the day of epiphany! I imagine the 3 kings trekking for so long over so many miles unsure of who or what they'd find. I wonder if they were disappointed when they ended up in a humble home instead of a mansion? It doesn't seem so. They worshiped and gave gifts and obeyed God's voice to avoid Herod.
I wonder how my waiting will end and how I'll respond.
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home