Thursday, May 13, 2010

Dear Pneuma,

It's love.  

I recently heard a sermon in which the well-meaning speaker suggested that love, in marriage relationships, fades, and only commitment and trust remain.  I wondered what was meant by the word love.  

I recently read a book titled The Art of Loving by Erich Fromm.  The author claimed that love is a discipline that must be practiced, conditioned and constantly applied.  I wondered how all of that activity left room for love to be received. 

I recently attended worship at a church with the words God Is Love painted on its sanctuary wall.  The congregation confessed its vileness and worthlessness to this love.  Then it left that sanctuary to share something with the world outside.  I couldn't help but wonder what that would be.

An anarchist suggests resistance to the status quo by daring to love.  A Jesus freak says love the sick, despairing, ulcer-ridden masses.  A professor suggests there is no such thing as love.  The Beatles say, "all we need is love."  Despots tremble in fear when love has come to reign.

In these ideas, it seems to me that love is quixotic, faithful, elusive, powerful, and free.  Therefore, we fear it.  We try to control it by using it for our own satisfactions.  We try to tame it by picking apart its limbs and organs.  We try to contain it, by limiting its bounds.  We try to own it by claiming it a product of our achievement.  We try to deny it by dressing it poorly, and refusing its advances.  We try to kill it by burying it deep. 

Yet, each of these techniques ends up disproving itself over and against love.  Fulfilling our own satisfactions soon causes dissatisfaction.  Love's components don't seem to add up to an easy universal.  Lovers continually cross borders.  Our achievements are rewarded handsomely by all that the world gives, but love is not there.  Buried love just calls and calls to us, pulsing and aching, a constant reminder that there is a vacuum within.

I think we do not like to be smaller than anything else.  We like the things we build.  We like the worlds we control.  We like predictably patterned days with obvious rules and expectations. 

We fear the landslide.  We fear the muscle-bound other.  We fear a reality that suggests we are not all that matters.  Yet, the mountain crushes us without feeling.  Death defeats us without our consent.  Life refuses to follow our directions.  

And then there is love-it crushes us with feeling.  It defeats us only with our consent. It changes our minds about where we want to go.  Love is bigger than the mountain.  Love is strong as death.  Love rides the currents of life.  We don't like to believe that anything is bigger, stronger or more adept than we.  Yet, to crush the mountain, to flip the bird at death, to dance the unknown paths of life, we must surrender first to that which is greater than them all.  

Ruminating,
Cobalt Dreams







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