How
could the Creator be as small
as creation? How dare
we try to objectify, classify, quantify
that which transcends existence?
I think I’ve finally figured it out. Found the answer. Placed the puzzle’s last piece.
All this bad religion out there, it’s a mistake of genre.
Doing-oriented American culture tends to think of scripture in terms of prose (especially technical prose). We like to have a resource for easy answers, quick fixes, little pick-me-ups.
But scripture is poetry.
Poetry doesn't give up its answers so easily. It has to be digested bite by bite. Slowly. Repeatedly.
And then there’s the silence. Lots of silence. Poetry takes time to unfold, and silence — serious meditation — is required if we intend to unravel meaning, find the source of our searching.
People don’t have time for this kind of thing. No patience. So they settle for the Sparknotes version. Never take a minute to think (let alone listen).
Enough of that. I probably need to offer an example. What about this one? What if God doesn’t really exist?
Wait.
Stop.
Pull your fingers away from the keyboard.
Hold off on the hate mail.
Think.
For just a minute.
And consider that God is not a thing. How could the Creator be as small as creation? How dare we try to objectify, classify, quantify that which is beyond, that which transcends existence?
But we dare to do just that every single Sunday because we live in little worlds. That’s what prose does. It offers answers, entertains, informs. There’s no challenge beyond the superficial.
But poetry!
Poetry couches each truth in a conundrum, in conflict, in the paradox. In poetry, the challenge is impossible (at least initially) because it pushes past human understanding, asks that we conceive of conflicting ideas working together to create...
something deeper,
something more meaningful,
something beautiful, which otherwise, we might never conceive.
5 comments:
I recently heard someone remark that God is closer to us that we are to ourselves: it reminded me of your thoughts.
And it offers a perfect example of paradox-power. Thanks for the gift.
Nice, Eric. Thanks for your thoughts, poetically put and riskily offered.
i like WHAT you said, and i like HOW you framed it, with space and rhythm.
I've been thinking about poetry...and waiting..and silence...lately as well. I agree--I think we miss so much when we race through the text, trying to find meaning, when the meaning is only there if we think, wait, listen, let the way the words work together work on us, as the Spirit draws us deeper. How could we ever try to explain God in prose? Well, we try--but it comes off more like poetry if it's said with truth. Thanks for sharing your piece of truth.
If I may offer a better understanding, it is we who are the poem and God the author.
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