Wednesday, November 4, 2015

The most crucial question: who are we, and what are we becoming?

                 Let’s begin with the question of who are we? For example, when I insist that we have never understood who we are much less who we are in relation to this entity we call God, what do I mean?

                That is a good question. And in some sense I feel as though I am back in Civil Procedure at the University of Tennessee College of Law. I often felt like an imposter, sitting there in one of the wooden desks, surrounded by others who were, for the most part, brighter than me in this area. Many of them had been raised in law cultures. Either their parents were attorneys or they already had minds just ready to latch onto legal concepts, as though they were sticky flypaper and the ideas just stuck and they were somehow adept at building legal arguments.

                I, on the other hand, struggled with these skills of legal analysis. At least I assume that I did, since my professors generally rated me very average on the tests. Most of the time, the grade for the entire semester rested on a single test. I’ve never done my best under such conditions. I would have been much better off if law school were more of a hands-on curriculum where I was actually performing legal tasks but beginning in a limited way with increased responsibilities as I gradually grew.

                But as to how the law school odyssey relates to my ideas about who we are in relation to God, the answer begins with what has always been for me an absolute certainty that anyone who believes can have a relationship with God. Furthermore, God will direct us. I applied to law school when I was forty entirely because I was convinced that God was leading me there. And I applied despite my feeling unprepared for the experience.

                And it is this sense of God’s presence, the intimacy and warmth of that presence that is another part of what I feel God has prepared me to describe. Since I was a young child, I was aware of it in the very air. How does one relate such things? And what does that have to do with who we are in relation to God and what we are becoming?

                Everything, really. It has so much to do with it and for so many reasons. The first one is so ominous and overpowering. It is this reality we speak of in church but never really develop. I was always anticipating more to be done with it, since the certainty of a relationship with this presence is huge. It is ominous and in a sense it is threatening to us. And the arrival of this presence reminds me of the silent, yet powerful building of a storm front which appears at first nearly imperceptibly on the horizon. At first it is nearly imperceptible, and yet it builds. Sometimes it is like that. It is how it seems to me as I am somewhere alone and I feel that presence begin to build.

                And yet the fact that it builds sometimes and is such a powerful thing does not imply that at other times the presence is not there. This presence we call God is there always, in every moment of every day. Sometimes it builds, though. It comes gently yet with an impending, pent up potential and I understand that it will build ominously like a weather front, a system that wraps me, surrounds me, infuses me with the warmth and sense of regeneration, hope, and inspiration that inspires. There were many times in my law school ordeal that this happened, and in the midst of such experience it is impossible to balk or give up.

                And when I suggest that there is much he has given me to say and explore, I suggest that it begins here with this reality and with all the ideas that percolate within the possibilities and the experience of this presence. The first among the many assertions I will make and attempt to develop lies here, in the predicament we are in. Yes, we are in a predicament. The human species is. We scarcely understand who we are and in this moment of our history we have lost any sense we may ever have had of who we are in relation to this One, this singular presence that has stalked us since our beginnings, though stalk might seem a strange word when used in relation to God. It is true in the sense that God has been relentless and patient with us. What we may not realize is that it is for a purpose, for it is what we are becoming that is so crucial. We are blind to it, and we are impertinent in our present attitude. Of course there have been many times through our tempestuous history when we have been such rascals. Such recalcitrant children who are arrogant brats prancing foolishly across the planet he has put here to be our home for the present.

                But yes, it is true that I claim to have lived my life to this point under his tutelage, being prepared to deliver these ideas about who we are and what it is we are becoming. This blog is me stretching, preparing the material which will become the first of a series of volumes in which I work through these ideas and describe the experience of learning to work with God. It hasn’t been easy and has required tremendous faith, as such challenges always do for those who seek to answer him and follow.

                I have no idea whether there will be many who are curious to read this. However, there is a tremendous sense of fulfillment in arriving at the time when I am ready to write down the ideas that have been restless and growing, thumping and jostling within me since I was a young man. As always, God has his timing. Often the most difficult thing we are challenged to do is to wait on him, to persevere through great difficulty and travail in faith and determination not to give up.

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