Thursday, August 27, 2009

Now don't be hasty, Master Meriadoc...

I am the most impatient person I know. I'm not talking simply of getting from one place to another quickly, or being frustrated about how long my mother takes when she runs in to the store to get a "few" things. I'm talking about all aspects of life. I hate waiting and transition. I want there to be an immediate resolution to every problem. I demand, again and again to God: Now! Now! Now! The value of gradual progression and growth has always been hard for me to accept.

But I am coming to realize the beauty and peace that lies in patience. The "waiting" times, when we are unsure, I think, are the opportunities that God offers us to really get to know him. Instead of constantly pressing forward on our life journey, to instead stop, and take a rest with God. He wants those moments of quiet contemplation when it's just you and Him. There is no reason to constantly jump from one person, place, or thing to the next. There is beauty in stillness.

In a world that is so economical, that is easily forgotten. It's widely thought that if you are being still, then you are not being productive. But those moments of stillness and quiet do so much to rejuvenate the soul, and prepare it for its next great release of energy.

God wants to make great things happen in our lives. But they take time. This beautiful song by Ed Cash illustrates that so well:

The old man saw the fallen tree
As far more than just dead wood
For love, time and his old sharp knife
Could change that tree to something good
So each piece of bark he stripped away
Using only his weathered hands
To find the scent of sweet sticky pine
Just the wood for this master's plan

Soon free from bark this naked tree
Cried out for new design
But the patience of the old man
Reminded him that great things take time

So he had a vision in his mind
Of what he wanted that tree to be
And he saw that tree as perfect and good
Before he touched a single piece
So he took the tree back to his home
And he set it on his working stone
And he began to chip away, chip away
And soon he did not feel so all alone

The tree began to take shape
Oh, his heart began to smile
But he knew he still had work to do
Because he remembered that great things take time

Some pieces of the wood were stubborn
And some just cut as easy as the air
But he didn't care how long it took to make each part complete
Yeah the time he took just showed how much he cared
How much he cared

Now perhaps in your fearful forest
You've found that you have fallen down
Don't be sad, don't be scared, no do not be afraid
Because there is one who can pick you up off the ground
You see if your destiny is to be carved into a perfect thing
Then life does not begin until you die to the way you're living.

Our entire lives are one big masterpiece, and time should be taken for every bit of them. If it's worth the time, then it's worth the effort, and the outcome is something beautiful and lasting.

So, as the Ents love to say, don't be hasty. Have peace. Pray. God is there, waiting for you to sit with Him. Every decision in life is important, and God wants to be involved in each one. Allow Him to be. He is (to use a metaphor I favored in my younger days) the great Solvent. Nothing is insoluble to Him. There is no place He doesn't belong, and no thing that He does not have a connection to.

Life does not begin until you die to the way you're living.

So take the time. You will see great things take shape, and your heart will indeed smile.

2 comments:

CeeCee said...

So, so, so true. I think this post speaks directly to my life right now. It's so easy to make mistakes because I want to know the future. It's so tempting to push God's hand to make him more for me. I definitely need to remember this every day, every second. Thanks for the reminder. Life really hasn't begun for me because I have so much trouble dying to the way I'm living!!! I can't wait to start living (and dying).

I love you, Ballie.

Anonymous said...

How is it that you ALWAYS know exactly what to say? I don't get it.

Oh, wait, yes I do. That's God, talking right through you, through your fingers, to everyone who decides to read this blog of yours. Your insight = amazing.

And I really, really like the metaphor, p.s.