A Testimony: Letting Go
Everything that has been said about surrender can be summed
up in the following testimony of a priest.
For years, which seems like centuries, I had a dream,
even as a small boy:
I sat completely alone on the earth.
Completely alone.
I saw myself sitting on that great globe.
Then it began. The constantly recurring
dreadful anguish.
The globe began to spin with raging speed.
The trees cracked. The mountains collapsed.
The ocean washed up out of the deep.
The wind howled in my ears: Let go! Let go! Let go!
I did not let go. I clung to the earth
with mouth and hands and feet.
For I was afraid. What will become of me
in this void, in this empty night?
Never, never...
Until I awoke. Wet from perspiration and anguish.
Now I am thirty-nine years old. I have let go. It was about
six years ago. It happened, not in a dream, but during the day, in the midst of
reality, and I felt: now I am finished, now anything can happen. Sorrow or joy,
anything! I loosened my grasp. I surrendered myself to God’s will in something
that became increasingly clearer, something that was a matter of life and
death. I was dragged along into emptiness. I lost my bearings and my foothold.
Such an experience can drive one insane. One could take one’s own life.
Everything becomes foreign to you. You really feel you have lost your grip.
Lost. You must be saved, born anew out of blood and darkness.
And when it has come to this point, everything becomes new,
even a flower, a butterfly, or the billowing of the wind in the reeds.
But most of all Him.
It is truly a matter of all or nothing. It is heaven or hell
for a person. One becomes a person or an inhuman creature. You stand before the
grace-filled choice, particularly after the Incarnation of the Son. Once! One
realizes later that life was pointing toward this all along, as the Old
Covenant toward the New, as the night toward the day, as losing life toward
gaining it.
I write this for those who know it, so that they may rejoice
with me in the Lord, and for those who are confronted with it, so that they
will not turn back, for the Lord is also shepherd in the night. He leads you
through dark valleys, and your heart can only come to the place for which it
longs through dark valleys.
A hurricane of love is raging over the earth, with his
tugging, luring, shouting: Let go, give in, in God’s name give in, all of you
together.
~Wilfrid Stinissen (from Into
Your Hands, Father: Abandoning Ourselves to the God Who Loves Us)
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