‘Therefore I tell you, [Jesus said] do not worry about your life, what you will eat or what you will drink, or about your body, what you will wear. Is not life more than food, and the body more than clothing? (Matthew 6:25)
I saw it again the other day. Flow.
It started with a TV interview with Al Pacino, the Academy
Award winning actor. Pacino described the day his eighth-grade teacher came to
his house and told his mother to encourage him to keep acting, keep getting up
on stage. She saw something come alive in him every time he performed in a
school play.
Pacino shared early days working in small theaters in New
York City, amazed and totally one with some elixir of life in his soul, knowing
he had to do this. It didn’t matter if I was successful or not, he said, whether
I had money or not, whether anyone liked me or not. This was my life. I had to
do it.
On the stage, bringing a character to life, he came alive.
The outward expression of his life and work flowed seamlessly with an inner
current of creative love and joy he didn’t create but discovered within himself.
He was one with himself and, as a person of faith, I’ll venture to say he was
one with the Creative Love who fashioned the mystery of his soul.
‘It is in this unity of love that life consists,’ Julian
of Norwich, writes in her Showings of Divine Love.
Yes, not in what we wear or how we look or whether we
have money or success or comfort or struggle, life is oneness with a love that makes
everything else but itself irrelevant.
When the love that is our true nature finds its natural expression,
a flood of joy and freedom flows like a fountain, filling our soul, lighting
our eyes, awakening our energies. We flow, one with ourselves and with the Love
who made us, each of us an embodied expression of the Loving Mystery who
transcends our knowing.
But as we flow with this love, we do know.
We know God, for we are one with the Love who made us, fulfilling
the hope for which we were created. And we are free. Distractions disappear. Worries
about how we are doing evaporate. We go with the flow, knowing we were made to enjoy
this grace, this bliss, this comfort, this joy, this unity of hearts.
Sometimes, this happens in prayer or song, when love surrounds
and silences the heart, words having become both unnecessary and meaningless because
a great love has swamped our being.
Two friends, professors at college and graduate school
levels, speak of moments when they totally forget themselves and are ‘carried
away,’ a most helpful phrase. Doing becomes being, and being becomes doing as they
give themselves fully to the moment, freely pouring out what they know, utterly
forgetful of all other concerns.
As a boy, I recall adults in my life counseling me or
someone else not to get too carried away with what we were saying or doing. All
things in moderation seemed to be their message. Certainly, there is some wisdom
in this.
But the life to which Jesus invites us, the life that he
gives us is all about being carried away in the flow of a great love, carried
away by beauty, carried away by the surge of joy that fills us when we fall
upon that which God fashioned us to be and do.
It takes years, really decades, to discover what Pacino
found on his eight-grade stage, and then only if you are awake, careful to
notice when and where the love that you are, the love that lives at your core,
begins to flow and render everything else … irrelevant.
David L. Miller
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