The Voice “in Here”
By Chris Lowney
The
Hebrew prophet Elijah finds God speaking…. We’re told that Elijah witnessed a
“great wind, so strong that it was splitting mountains and breaking rocks in
pieces.” But Elijah perceived that “the Lord was not in the wind,” or in the
earthquake or fires that followed. Instead, later on, there was a “sound of
sheer silence.” And Elijah heard God speak out of that silence. Those of us who
heard this story as children may remember the poetic King James language for
this encounter—Elijah heard God’s “still small voice” (1 Kings 19:11–13).
Perhaps,
if we attune ourselves to hearing that still, small voice, we will find it whispered
all around us and, more important, from within us. As the Quaker minister
Parker Palmer put it, “Vocation does not come from a voice ‘out there’ calling
me to become something I am not. It comes from a voice ‘in here’ calling me to
be the person I was born to be, to fulfill the original selfhood given me at
birth by God.”
And
just how might we recognize the voice “in here”? The Protestant minister
Frederick Buechner hears God communicating to us through our profoundest human
concerns and interests: “The place that God calls us is that place where the
world’s deep hunger and our own deep desire meet.” And one of my friends, asked
how God might influence our job choices, said she saw God’s fingerprint on our
skills and circumstances: “The gifts and talents God has given us are clues as
to God’s plan for us.” Another friend spoke similarly, focusing on the passions
and interests that not only motivate us to excellence but also touch all those
who see our excellence in action: “What fuels one to perform with excellence
has a spiritual quality that inspires, nurtures, and sustains one’s work. . . .
I find when I experience extraordinary talent in someone—whether it is playing
tennis, singing, preaching, caring for the sick—it reminds me of God’s grace and
seems to be a very wonderful way for that person to use his or her time and
energy.”
Anywhere that friend sees human excellence devoted to a worthy
end, she sees God at work. Similarly, the nineteenth-century Jesuit poet Gerard
Manley Hopkins found God’s voice and presence in countless everyday
encounters: “For Christ plays in ten thousand places, / Lovely in limbs, and
lovely in eyes not his.”
Perhaps
God also speaks through our circumstances, life’s unpredictable, unexpected
turns that eventually convince all but the most stubborn of us what Fr. Ciszek
eventually learned while sitting in that jail cell in Soviet Russia: we don’t
control as much of life as we imagined when we were invincible
twenty-year-olds. We learn the truth of Jesus’ haunting prediction to the
apostle Peter: “When you were younger, you used to fasten your own belt and to
go wherever you wished. But when you grow old, you will stretch out your hands,
and someone else will fasten a belt around you and take you where you do not
wish to go” (John 21:18). Scripture scholars interpret that melancholy verse as
the Gospel writer’s attempt to explain Peter’s gruesome martyrdom as something
other than a total disaster for the fledgling, uncertain Christian community.
But who
hasn’t lived Peter’s mystery in some small way? We find ourselves less in
control of our destinies than we once imagined. Career plans don’t work out; bodies
don’t respond as they once did; unforeseen tragedies, deaths of loved ones, and
marital breakups shatter cherished dreams. Some dreams are not merely deferred
but die.
Yet remarkably other doors open and other possibilities emerge.
We find new ways to make our way forward in the world. Like Ignatius
of Loyola, whose dreams of a military career shattered along with his
leg, we stand up eventually and walk again. Indeed, our passage through
disappointment and trauma can seem, in retrospect, a season of grace. We
struggled back to our feet by our own courage and determination, but we also
felt an empowering touch, as when Jesus reached out to a death-struck young
girl and exhorted, “ ‘Talitha cum,’ which means, ‘Little girl, get up!’ ” (Mark
5:41). We do get up, and in the course of a subsequent lifetime, we often walk
farther and climb higher than we first imagined possible. We see that great
personal tragedies bear not only sorrow but sometimes the seeds of our own
resurrections.
How are
we to interpret the alternately serendipitous and disappointing, unexpected and
unpredictable, courses of our lives? What is happening when death or financial
disaster force us to reconsider what we want from life, when teachers or
mentors find and nurture talent we didn’t know we had, when we succeed beyond
our wildest imaginings, when managers steer our careers in fortuitous
directions, when we aren’t offered the job we wanted so badly, when friends
point out opportunities that we didn’t know existed, or when we persist in
pursuing a personal passion against all odds of success, only to find that
success and fulfillment eventually come? Do such cases merely vindicate human
ingenuity, resilience, fortitude, and imagination? Or is God, too, at work in
some ineffable way, as Hopkins says, “play[ing] in ten thousand places / Lovely
in limbs, and lovely in eyes not his”?
Well, why not both? That’s how I read Ignatius, the former
military commander and take-charge, type-A personality who nonetheless attuned
himself to read God’s will in the subtle promptings of consolations
and desolations. Or, as expressed in a great mantra of Jesuit spirituality,
“Find God in all things.”
Image by ky_olsen under Creative Commons license.
Great work, keep it up!
ReplyDeleteDevasia
Thanks a lot Fr Devasia.
ReplyDelete