A question we must answer: Why would a person of intellect and awareness want to submit to the will of another, even if that other is God?
Sometimes I
am relaxing, fiddling with the smartphone settings and tinkering with various
instructions I am inputting to one device or another. These are some of the
tasks that define us now. Who could have imagined this even a few decades ago?
And who could have imagined that our children would have in their eager,
delicate fingers the quick, decisive taps and swipes that bring smartphones to
life and enable them to access information or perform feats that require the
cooperation of all these many computers linked through the Internet?
I was
watching on the five-inch screen of my smartphone the Disney movie Saving Mr. Banks the other day. It is about the making of Mary Poppins,
focusing on how Walt Disney had to lure its author to California and persuade
her to sign over the rights. And during the process, we see the creative
process. Watching the movie, I remembered where I was during those years when
Disney made films I would watch at the Mannering theater in downtown Middlesboro, Kentucky, mesmerized by
the lovely Haley Mills in Parent Trap,
which was produced a decade or so before Mary
Poppins.
But the reason Saving Mr. Banks engrossed me was that
it includes an inside look at the Disney
studios, what it was like for the creative guys who wrote the music and created
the story boards, reading through the script as it evolved. I remember the
hurting, yearning place inside me as I would careen down the sidewalk which
paralleled Boomway Hill in Middlesboro
on roller skates, feeling the rough vibration rattle up through the long bones
in my legs.
I yearned to somehow be part of
the Disney movie experience, and some of my most elaborate daydreams involved
me there. I could not imagine it accurately because I didn’t know what the
studios looked like, way out there in California. But I felt that yearning. And
I suppose this yearning, this intensity of desire for something, is a common
experience. Some of us are able to attain our dreams, and others not. Human
history is filled with the excruciating pain of being denied. There are the
ones who have been abused, crushed, their lives crippled or snuffed by cruel
individuals, whether these be powerful rulers, governments, or simply societal
rules. For others, the responsibilities and perplexities of life interfere with
our attainment of dreams.
But one question regarding our
search for God involves what the Bible speaks of as God’s will for us. That is
something that haunts me. It was one of my earliest concerns. I wanted to know
what God had planned for me. Standing outside on the crooked sidewalk slab, the
concrete slab pushed up by the roots of one of the giant Maples that dappled
Dorchester Avenue with their friendly presence. Or perhaps I might more
accurately say it was the sunlight that dappled, sifting through leaves and gray
branches.
The ambiance, the warm shadows
and silty scents of the outside world in these fertile neighborhoods calmed me
and were responsible for the sense of pleasure, of contentedness I often had.
Just to be there, to walk outside in the morning and feel the chilly air, the
softness of its touch and how it spread over all there was, and I would in the
afternoon lean against one of the trees and wonder about the world, and what it
might mean to walk in the stillness within the measure of this presence, filled
with the warmth and touch of what it was to have the sense of him.
Such an understanding of a world
in which this presence is all and in which the only true meaning and
satisfaction and fulfillment is within the experience of God is not easy to
find. It is nearly always the product of hard experience, and many never find
it. In our time, perhaps most never fully understand this, even when they spend
much time in church trying to glean some connection with the words and rituals
there, developed over centuries and millennia. We know if we are honest that
many find no relevance in church and feel somehow bereft of the fiery
germination of the spirit which is excited and eager to move out upon this
adventure with the one we so awkwardly name God.
This does return us to the
fundamental question. Who are we in this life, this earthly world? And most
particularly, who are we in relation to this presence? And what is it that we
are becoming?
Such are the
questions that have scratched at me, like a persistent creature scratching at
the door, wanting in. And I have spent my life trying to coax it to sit upon my
spirit and help me understand what all of this is about, and who we are, and
where it is we are going.
