Making sense out of it...
“...I believe I can make sense out of it. You can’t see
anything properly while your eyes are blurred with tears. You can’t, in most
things, get what you want if you want it too desperately: anyway, you can’t get
the best out of it. ‘Now! Let’s have a real good talk’ reduces everyone to silence.
‘I must get a good sleep tonight’ ushers in hours of wakefulness.
Delicious drinks are wasted on a really ravenous thirst. Is it similarly the
very intensity of the longing that draws the iron curtain, that makes us feel
we are staring into a vacuum when we think about our dead? ‘Them as asks’ (at
any rate ‘as asks too importunately’) don’t get. Perhaps can’t.
And so, perhaps, with God. I have gradually been coming to
feel that the door is no longer shut and bolted. Was it my own frantic need
that slammed it in my face? The time when there is nothing at all in your soul
except a cry for help may be just the time when God can’t give it: you are like
the drowning man who can’t be helped because he clutches and grabs. Perhaps
your own reiterated cries deafen you to the voice you hoped to hear.
On the other hand, ‘Knock and it shall be opened.’ But does
knocking mean hammering and kicking the door like a maniac? And there’s also
‘To him that hath shall be given.’ After all, you must have a capacity to
receive, or even omnipotence can’t give. Perhaps your own passion temporarily
destroys the capacity.
For all sorts of mistakes are possible when you are dealing
with Him. Long ago, before we were married, H. was haunted all one morning as
she went about her work with the obscure sense of God (so to speak) ‘at her
elbow,’ demanding her attention. And of course, not being a perfected saint,
she had the feeling that it would be a question, as it usually is, of some
unrepented sin or tedious duty. At last she gave in—I know how one puts it
off—and faced Him. But the message was, ‘I want to give you something’ and
instantly she entered into joy.”
~C. S. Lewis (from A Grief Observed)
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