Sunday, August 27, 2023

Sea of love

 We declare to you what was from the beginning … what we have seen and heard so that you also may have fellowship with us; and truly our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ. We are writing these things so that our joy may be complete. (1 John 1:1a, 3-4)

‘You live in a sea of love,’ so went the words I whispered to Ben on the night before he left for the university. I wanted to give him what I want, what I need, naming the only thing that truly fills the heart with joy: to know, to feel, to live in awareness of an ocean of love surrounding your whole being so that there is nowhere to fall that the waters will not hold you.

I did not lie to him, though some might suggest I indulged in a fantasy. It’s undeniable: The things we fear can and will happen to us and those we love; hurts and wounds are unavoidable and there are those who don’t give a wink that we bleed or that the knife that cut us was in their hand. And sometimes, we ourselves are the assailant.

But when I think of Ben stepping deeper into the complexity of that world (and remembering how naïve, lost and unprepared I was at his age), I find comfort and hope in the sea of love surrounding him—the love of his parents, his brother and Dixie, my wife; also, the professors, tutors, helpers and strangers who, perhaps without even knowing it, will become bearers (sacraments!) of the Love who alone satisfies the human heart.

And I think of myself, believing, trusting, knowing by experience that the love I whispered in his ear in the darkness of a Saturday evening is not my private possession but the Love and Light of the One who was from the beginning, the One who labors in all that is good and true, the Love who flows like a river amid our aches and pains, wants and needs, hopes and ambitions, successes and failures, carrying us out of isolation toward one, great sea of Love.

‘Father, may they all be one,’ Jesus once prayed, ‘as you and I are one.’ It’s a dream, God’s dream for the world and every last one of us. We are a long way from it. But the dream already comes true, like in the unmistakable joy of whispering words of the love you need into another heart.

David L. Miller


Sunday, August 20, 2023

Even the crumbs

She said, ‘Yes, Lord, yet even the dogs eat the crumbs that fall from their masters’ table.’ Then Jesus answered her, ‘Woman, great is your faith! Let it be done for you as you wish.’ (Matthew 15:27-28b)

When I ask, Grandson Ben tells me what he is seeing and doing in the hospital. Sometimes, his father needs to leave the room when the tale grows graphic, but the rest of us stay to marvel at what he’s learning and the verve with which he throws himself into it.

Me? I’m entranced by the energy of what it means to be 18, like Ben, daily meeting a kaleidoscopic parade of cultures, languages, personalities, needs, suffering, triumphs, failures, squalid seediness and immense dignity as it passes through the halls, all the while robing up and putting on an extra pair (or two) of latex gloves (just in case) to offer care because that is why you are there.

“It’s never the same. You don’t know what’s going to happen next,” Ben tells us. “That’s why I like it,” and I understand him because that gene runs in the family. Today, he mentions a young man with syphilis, who is also HIV positive. Across the table, my mother looks at me and shakes her head. “And we’re supposed to consider him a child of God,” she says. “It’s hard.”

“No, it isn’t,” I say softly, though I wonder if she heard me. It is not hard to imagine a series of terrible choices driven by unruly passions and normal human needs that might lead someone to disaster as they vainly tried to comfort their sorrows, assuage their loneliness or fill an inner emptiness they little understand.

It is not hard to imagine a childhood of pain or abuse or neglect leading to a life of addiction, dissipation and disaster. Nor is it hard to imagine Ben’s patient suffers bitter pains and recoils in fear from what lies before him … because all of us have and will know pain and fear, along with all the beauties of being human souls made in the image of Infinite Love, longing to feel that Love filling every empty place of our conflicted and complicated hearts.

Children of God, we are, all of us, including the woman who came to Jesus asking him to heal her daughter from the demon or disease or whatever it was that tormented her day and night. She and her daughter were outsiders, Canaanites, and Jesus didn’t jump to the task and heal her, instead referring to her as a ‘dog,’ an ethnic slur.

I don’t know why he did that (and there’s no end to the speculation), but I am certain this story is true because early Christians would never have made up a tale that seems to put Jesus in a bad light.

The bright light, however, is not on Jesus but on the Canaanite woman who intuitively knew the good things in this life, like blessing, healing and care, are not just for the good, the privileged, the lucky and those who have done everything right, but also for those like her whom some deem unworthy.

And why? Because in this life (and the next) we eat from the Master’s table, who unlike us is infinitely generous. The woman knew what the good, the privileged, the lucky and those who have done everything right often fail to understand. It’s all grace, this life, even the crumbs. To say nothing of the life to come.

David L. Miller

Friday, August 11, 2023

This not that

 Then the kingdom of heaven will be like this. Ten young women took their lamps and went to meet the bridegroom.  Five of them were foolish, and five were wise. When the foolish took their lamps, they took no oil with them, but the wise took flasks of oil with their lamps. (Matthew 25:1-4)

The joy we crave has a door, and it is this, not that.

This is the present moment, right in front of us. Often as not, we miss this … because our eyes and heart are fixed on that … over there, something that isn’t here, or at least not yet and maybe never will be. Like it or not, we are where we are.

Sometimes our this is eminently embraceable, like when Dixie trundles sleepy-eyed down the hall each morning and into my arms as she has for decades, longing for touch, knowing, too, that I have her coffee set up for her.

But sometimes our this is exactly what we most fear. My friend receives a diagnosis nobody wants, and his wife wonders if the foundation of their life together will soon crumble to dust. Who can throw their arms and heart around this … as it threatens to still the sweet grace of long-shared laughter?

It feels insensitive or even inhuman to suggest human hearts should or even can embrace such a moment, but the importunate truth is that this … is the only place grace and love can be known. This moment, with whatever quagmire of emotion warms or chills the blood, is where we meet or fail to greet the Love who awaits us there. Every moment is filled with the potential to draw fuller love and life from the well of our souls where the Love Who Is … is pleased to dwell.

The bridegroom approaches, according to Jesus’ parable of the wise women, ready to be welcomed by souls who manage to stay open to Love’s nearness, no matter how troubling life can be. It is they who enter the feast to celebrate the marriage of heaven and earth, drinking the sweet wine of divine love, which never runs dry, not in this life or in the mystery beyond.

Lord knows, I do this poorly. Aggressive drivers, casual disrespect and about a thousand other things can roil my heart, evaporating awareness that the present moment is a door through which to enter—and be—the joy of Love’s living nearness. Missed opportunities litter most lives, and I am no different.

But each day comes anew. Letting go of what was, I light the lamp of awareness once more, hungry to greet the One who breathes joy into willing hearts.

David L. Miller



Sunday, August 06, 2023

Treasure hunt

 The kingdom of heaven is like treasure hidden in a field, which a man found and covered up; then in his joy he goes and sells all that he has and buys that field. (Matthew 13:44)

The cinder trail at McKee Marsh splits a few hundred yards into the hike. You can walk east or west from that point, but if you continue straight, into the cattails and eye-high marsh grass, you would slosh your way to the place where a treasure was unearthed in 1977.

Workers scooping sticky mud from the bottom of the marsh came upon the thick bones of a wooly mammoth from the last ice age, more than 10,000 years ago. All in all, 75 percent of a complete skeleton was painstakingly discovered and reassembled.

Hard to imagine that this place on the edge of suburbia was once so wild, but walkers still come here looking for treasure, although few of them might put it that way. The treasure we seek is ourselves, or at least that deeper, more human part of ourselves we call heart … or soul.

Turning east, I find mine about a mile into the hike on a weather-worn wood platform, built above the level of the cattails.

It’s a place to watch herons and egrets picking their way among the shallows, looking for small fish, but they are not here today. The water level is too low, the pond nearly dry, sending the birds to seek their lunch in the West Branch of the DuPage River a short flight away.

Pausing on the platform reveals only the crystal blue dome of a summer sky, and lazy white cumulus clouds lingering high, with nowhere to go and no need to hurry off. The luminous dome encircles green horizons in every direction, holding everything I see and feel and am in a single embrace.

Standing here, it is easy to understand why ancient souls imagined the earth was flat, encircled by the dome of the sky, awed by the expanse of the heavens into which they gazed. Equally ancient, is the gratitude that cries from hidden depths within me, as an unseen rooster crows from a leafy ridge far to the west.

Encompassed within the embrace of an august sky, my heart gives wild praise for everything green I see, for trees and meadows, grasses and cattails, for the winding cinder path that leads me, for the rooster whose song I join, for the awareness of being one with the profusion of life that surrounds me at every hand and for the love I feel for it all and even for my own life, diminished some by age and ailment, but my heart able to feel more than ever it has … and certainly more than I ever can say.

I don’t know if is best to say our souls are saved or simply discovered in moments when love fills every space within you and wild gratitude bursts the seams of your heart. Perhaps both. But I do know that this love is a great and holy treasure that points to a far greater love more luminous than a summer sky. And the greatest treasure of all is to find this love hidden in your own mortal heart.

If you look outside yourself, you will never find God, according to Christian mystic, Meister Eckhart. But once you discover God there, well, life becomes a treasure hunt.

 David L. Miller

Sunday, July 30, 2023

Heaven in the Quonset

The Son of man came eating and drinking, and they say, ‘Behold, a glutton and a drunkard, a friend of tax collectors and sinners!’ Yet wisdom is justified by her deeds.” (Matthew 11:19)

The Nelson auditorium is a corrugated steel quonset that rises like a half-moon on the east side of Main Street, otherwise known as Nebraska State Highway 14. When I left there, 38 years ago, the population sign read 750, but I think the pollsters were two sugar-high five-year-old boys having a clicker-counter contest. I suspect the actual number was a third less.

But the number of souls makes less difference that their quality, and to this day the souls I knew there still bring tears to my eyes when their faces appear out of the ether and parade through my mind. Some of those faces have long rested beneath the ground they loved and worked to make a life for themselves and their families. Most things in Nelson revolve around agriculture in one way or another. People pray for rain, hate hail, work hard and often play even harder, which is why I think of the auditorium.

As I recall it, the quonset is a 70- or 80-foot-long cylinder, walls sloping to the foundation. Inside, there was a basketball floor with an elevated stage at the far east end for community plays and follies, all local talent. One year, my wife, Dixie, was a saloon dancer, and I sang in a barber shop quintet. I don’t think the New York Times ever sent a reviewer. Their loss. It was a hoot.

As a local pastor, I don’t know how many wedding receptions I attended there. They coalesce in my mind into one great celebration. There was always music and long tables of food, self-serve for the most part. Cuisine was basic and plentiful, sandwiches, ham, roast beef and barbeque, and five-gallon bowls of potato salad. There was pinkish punch for those who didn’t indulge and a brewery of beer for the majority.

No one bothered to watch the door or check invitations, and as the night deepened, I recall times a couple of stragglers would wander in from Sportsman’s Corner down the street because food and beer flowed freely here, and, after all, this was a community celebration, right?

Certainly, there were toasts as well as a few colorful blessings and embarrassing moments recounted by friends and well-wishers who, oft as not, made a joke of it because telling someone straight out what is in your heart might make your eyes leak.

All in all, it was community and love and joy and, in my imagination, rather like celebrating a meal with Jesus, that wine bibber and party boy who was regularly denounced for eating and drinking with the wrong sort of people. A drunk and a glutton they called him.

The Kingdom of God is like a wedding feast, Jesus said on more than one or two occasions. And on more than one or two occasions, I walked among the revelers in the auditorium thinking about why Jesus used weddings to tell us what happens when heaven marries earth and they are joined as one.

I didn’t have to think long. Looking at their faces, I knew. Life and love and the heart of God are far better than I know how to say.

 David L. Miller

Thursday, July 20, 2023

 Enter my joy

Come to me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me; for I am gentle and lowly in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. (Matthew 11:28-29)
What do we hear in Jesus’ voice as he speaks these words? What is his expression as he beckons us to come near that we might find rest for our souls? This moment, like so many in the gospels, invites imagination.
Most often, I suspect we hear gentleness in his voice and see compassion on his face. And why not? I know of no one who has not needed a safe place to fall, a gentle presence in which to collapse when life is hard, death is near and the heart weary and worn.
Entering the heart of the One who bids me to come to him is about the best reason I know to pray my life, to speak what my heart feels, trusting his heart is eager to hear and envelop my joys and sorrows in the ocean of love he is. Silent joy often comes when words are done, and the heart sinks into his presence.
But there is another way to see and receive the gift in Jesus’ words. His invitation to lay the weight of our lives at his feet follows a moment of exuberant joy as he looks at the humble poor, the open hearts and eager souls who hang on his words, feeling their spirits take flight as divine love embraces their lives and fills their hearts.
Happiness glistens in his eyes, and laughter plays across his lips as he sees the reign of God, the gracious will of the Holy Mystery, coming to life in the lives of those who little imagined God would choose to live in them.
Filled with gratitude, his invitation spills across the centuries, the generous overflow of a happy heart eager for us to know what he knows, feel what he feels and be filled with the loving joy of the One who fills him.

David L. Miller

Sunday, July 16, 2023

 At that time Jesus said, ‘I thank you, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because you have hidden these things from the wise and the intelligent and have revealed them to infants; yes, Father, for such was your gracious will. (Matthew 11:25-26)

The infallible sign

I come to pray each day hoping to see Jesus. I want two things. First, I want to see him touching, teaching or healing someone and feel his love passing through the centuries and into me, so that my heart and his are joined in one love.

My second hope is to see and feel his joy, which I believe is a missing ingredient in much of contemporary Christianity. So much of what I see is so serious, so grim, so critical, so negative in its judgements and critiques—or so listless in its practice—that I wonder why anyone would want to have anything to do with it.

As a child, my little home church sang a few verses of Psalm 51 as members’ offerings were carried forward to the altar. “Restore to me the joy of thy salvation,” we sang these words every single Sunday, as if to remind ourselves that joy is an infallible sign of God’s presence and the fulfillment of God’s desire for us. As much as ever, the words are much-needed prayer as news near and far, from the personal to the global, threatens to deflate our spirits.

Increasingly, I have adopted a hermeneutic of joy as I meditate on a passage of the Bible or read the events of my life to see what the Spirit is saying in and around me. I look for the joy of Jesus as he heals, teaches or blesses. I ask, what is the joy, the fulfillment of heart to which this biblical passage leads me; or what does this moment of my mortal life invite me to notice and feel, celebrate and share?

Sometimes, this is easy to see, like in the passage I quoted above. Jesus surveys the knot of people gathered around him and releases a heart-of-gratitude cry to the heavens for those who feel a new world, a new way of being breaking forth in their presence and within their hearts as they watch what he does and listen to what he says.

But others, proud, self-possessed and self-satisfied hearts, don’t get it. They busily employ their critiques, deconstructing and judging his every turn, unable to see let alone feel the wonder of divine love shattering the barriers of human understanding, as Jesus creates a new community in which all that really matters is the welcome of the One who is Love Unbounded.

Joy fills and spills from his every pore as he looks at those who come to him, loving them whole, happy that they see and feel what the others could, too, if they had eyes to see and ears attuned to the music of divine love. But only the humble can hear, and only the fumbling can find … for they know their need.

Jesus’ joy is like what happens when a generation or three of your family is gathered around the dinner table heaped with more food than they can possibly eat. If you are like me, a moment comes when you lean back and watch, listening to the ebb and flow of voices and laughter, filled with gratitude for every face and for the wonder that you are there … feeling more love for them than you can put into words without blubbering all over the mashed potatoes and making a perfect fool of yourself.

Joy, heart-filling, soul-spilling happiness for the miracle of your own blessed life and the wonder that you can feel a love so much greater than any you imagined you could ever bear: it’s a Jesus moment, the kind that restores your joy and thereby saves your soul, washing away every trace of cynicism about life’s true meaning and unassailable beauty.

I have come that my joy may be in you, Jesus once told his friends. That is why tomorrow morning, while the coffee is brewing, I will read another Bible story about Jesus, hoping to feel the joy that spills from his heart as he loves the hungry souls of people like me.

Again and again, his joy has saved me from my moody melancholies, from the unrest of our riven times, from the cynicism that tempts me to believe our little lives don’t much matter and from common wounds, worries and weariness that weigh on us all.

And tomorrow, I suspect he’ll do it again.

David L. Miller

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Wednesday, June 07, 2023

Finding joy


On the last day of the festival, the great day, while Jesus was standing there, he cried out, ‘Let anyone who is thirsty come to me, and let the one who believes in me drink. As the scripture has said, “Out of the believer’s heart shall flow rivers of living water.’ (John 7:37-38) … I have said these things to you so that my joy may be in you, and that your joy may be complete. (John 15:11)


I’ve been laughing more lately. I think I know why, but I do not want to claim too much. The human heart is mysteriously convoluted, making dubious most claims of self-knowledge.

All I can say is that I am trying to adopt a hermeneutic of joy, more carefully noting when I smile and at what, slowing down to savor moments of affection when my heart is moved by a face, a moment, a shape or color, a soul near or even a fleeting image from the television screen.

I want to feel joy. I crave joy, which means I have a lot of company. Our whole riven world craves joy, since most of what we see and watch as the news rolls by kills our joy. But joy is something more, something deeper than happiness. Nor is it dependent on pleasant times and favorable events.

Heavens, one of the most joyful memories of my life is the day of my blessed father’s funeral. I sat with my sister and brothers behind our childhood home, drinking wine and swapping stories about a struggling man whose imprint lives in each of our hearts, along with the love we will always feel for him. There was no laughter without tears that day, and no tears without laughter. I do not know that I have ever felt more connected with my four siblings than on that day on the patio.

So, what is joy? How does it happen? Where is it found, or does it find us?

I make no pretentions of possessing answers. But these questions keep bringing me back to small, often hidden, out of the way moments when the billowing heart reaches to enfold and hold a moment, any given moment, in loving affection and appreciative delight.

Joy is not merely the pleasure of taking in the beauty of flowers on a summer morning. It is the rush of love for the wonder of beauty, for the miracle of color, form and fragrance delighting your senses in a single moment you didn’t see coming. It is intuitively knowing the beauty you see and the love you feel are not two separate things but are all part of one great love, one great beauty that for one blessed moment you finally see.

Joy, it seems, is the presence of this love filling your being and fulfilling your existence as a human soul created in Love’s blessed image. It is the silent connection I knew as Dixie and I entered the sanctuary last Sunday and took our place. Several near us knelt in their pew; one, eyes tightly closed, appeared rapt in prayer. I know nothing about them, not their names or stories, nor the hopes and needs that moved them to their knees, for this is a new place for us. But tears of loving recognition moistened my eyes for the beauty of hearts unashamed to acknowledge their need and vulnerability, hungry for a grace beyond any this world can provide. A stranger, I was at home among people in whose hearts I recognized my own.

Joy is less about being loved than it is about being love. We crave being loved, and most of us want to be loved for our own sweet selves, which, of course, aren’t always so sweet or lovable. Being loved that way is exactly what Jesus says God does and who God is, a flowing fountain of infinite love in which we are quite welcome to stand.

It is a joy to find a place where that fountain naturally splashes over us and makes us new. This is where true joy begins. But the fulfillment of our joy, the completion of our humanity, happens not in the awareness of being so-loved but in knowing this holy fountain flowing within us so that we are one with the One whose joy it is to love such as us.

Every day is a precious privilege, an invitation to open our eyes and ears to Love’s blessed flow in our little corner of the world, knowing God is eager … to share the joy.

David L. Miller

 

 

 

 

Wednesday, May 31, 2023

Jesus came and stood among them and said, ‘Peace be with you.’ After he said this, he showed them his hands and his side. Then the disciples rejoiced when they saw the Lord.  Jesus said to them again, ‘Peace be with you. As the Father has sent me, so I send you.’  When he had said this, he breathed on them and said to them, ‘Receive the Holy Spirit. (John 20:19b-22)

As I am known

It is not enough for me to hear. I need to see … and feel. I do not want merely to hear Jesus' words. Nor is my heart satisfied to stand apart, looking at him as he looks at me, even in the light of resurrection morning.  

I want to know what is in him … in me … that I may know as I am known. More. I want to know the world as he knows it, embracing it all in the all-embracing love to which he welcomes me to this morning place where I receive the day.

Waves of pink petunias flow from the pot beside me on the balcony, each bloom a miniature megaphone proclaiming love’s abundance. Their voices blend with the chatter of sparrows, deep within the honey locusts that line the street. A lone cardinal perches higher up, calling to his more prosperous neighbors in the oaks of the next subdivision.

Creation sings, and my privileged heart hears, but it is not enough. The heart longs for something much more. I want to embrace them in a heart full of love for every blessed thing I see, delighting in each finger leaf of the locusts, feeling what Jesus felt as his gaze lingered over the wild grasses and yellow flowers sprinkled on Galilean hillsides.

I want to feel the delight of holding and cherishing them all in a great and imponderable love, hungry for my heart to expand and extend to people going to their jobs on this May day and across oceans to battered souls far removed from my morning reverie.

In other words, I want to know the love of Jesus surging within me. It is an audacious prayer and foolish, because I know I am weak and cannot stand the pain of loving a broken world the way he loves it … and me.

Still, I surely want the joy of it, and joy comes as I see him appearing in the light of his resurrection, his hands raised in blessing for his frightened friends, his lips forming a single word, Peace.  And in my heart, I am right there beside them, as surely as I sit here contemplating the scene.

I see … and feel … his light stretching out to envelop us all and fill me whole, freeing me to breathe as he breathes his Spirit, his imponderable love, into the poverty of my heart so that I am rich with the Mystery he is.

And for one precious moment among the petunias, my prayer is answered. For, I know this weary and wondrous world … and myself, as I am known.

David L. Miller

Friday, May 26, 2023

Holy Father, protect them in your name that you have given me, so that they may be one, as we are one.  While I was with them, I protected them in your name that you have given me. (John 17:11b-12a)

Wrapped in the name

“This sucks,” Rachel announced, as we walked in the early dark across the parking lot, after Ben’s graduation. She paused, then sighed, “but it is as it should be,” resigned to the river of time that would soon carry her eldest to university classrooms, beyond reach of her morning hugs and the fierce love that possessed her since she first cradled this black-haired boy in a Chicago hospital, husband Armando at her side.

Fierce is the only way she knows how to love, as those blessed to be recipients of her passions well know. But loving is not only the joy of graduation nights. It also means losing and hurting and fearing and letting go when you want to hold fast, wrapping your beloved in protective arms when you know what the world can do to them.

It’s life, as it should be. If I needed a reminder, I saw it the next day as I drove down Belmont Avenue and saw the sign in front of Puffer Elementary announcing the date for kindergarten registration. Exciting, yes, but in mere weeks other parents will stand at bus stops or the school house door holding a small hand they are not quite ready to release.

“For God’s sake, protect them,” the heart cries, and it is a holy cry, a prayer wrung also from the heart of Jesus as he takes leave of those he loved in the world and loved to the end. I wrapped them in your name, the name you gave me, he prays to the Loving Mystery he calls Holy Father.

The name is not a mere word or label spoken on the breath. It means the heart, the substance, the deepest, truest, reality of all God is. The name is the fierce love and hope the Holy One holds for each of us and the crazy world in which we live and die. The name is the divine determination to hold us fast in love’s embrace as we wander far from the places that gave us birth.

The name is the Living Presence who is ever near when we lose our way. It is the Mystery of renewing breath when the world does its worst to extinguish our joy. The name is the Love who filled our hearts in the early dark of a parking lot, transforming us into sacraments of divine grace.

We go our ways, as do our beloved, never knowing exactly where we will go or how far. Joys will come, sorrows, too; hurts will wound, and hopes will rise, perhaps none greater than those we imagine as our beloved set out on their course.

We can’t go with them, so we pray with Jesus. Protect them, dear God. Protect us all. For heaven’s sake … and for our own, wrap us in your name.

David L. Miller

Wednesday, May 17, 2023

Out and in

I chose you out of the world, therefore the world hates you. (John 15:19b)

Out of the world and into myself, I followed an elderly African American couple through the Menards parking lot. They doddered ahead of Dixie and me, hobbled by age and infirmity. Turning around, they worried they were in our way. But they were not in the way. They are the way, their smiles an invitation to come out of the world and into the way of life.

So, too, was this morning’s post from a former student, her eyes alight with the delight I first saw in her when she was five, throwing cream pies in my face at a church fair. Now, she graduates college, and the loving satisfaction I feel is surpassed only by the rapt embrace of my grandson, Ben, on his first day after high school, poignant with tears of joy, relief and sorrow for what he endured.

All of this occurs in the world, of course, but each is a moment when the swirling love of the blessed Trinity calls me out of the world and its benighted values and into the way of Jesus, where only love and loving matters.

Perhaps my hearing improved when I turned 70 (How did that happen?), but the noise of the world I well knew and which knew me is fading into the background, and the inner voice of love, which was always there, sounds clearer and more compelling, making me wish I had been a better listener in decades past.

“Come out,” the voice says. Come out of the anxious tyranny of trying to keep up. Release every attempt to convince yourself and anyone else that you were stronger, smarter or more important that than you are. Come out of the world’s addiction to status, popularity, power and the diabolical need to be right, this cancerous blight on the heart.

Flee the deadly urgency of digital screens cajoling you to care about a million things that don’t much matter. And while you are at it, quit running from the nagging suspicion that you have been an imposter, projecting an image, laboring at tasks and responsibilities for which you were never quite qualified. That’s true of everyone in one way or another. It’s called life. We’re never fully ready for where we find ourselves or what comes at us. So, come out of all this anxious self-preoccupation.

Flee all of this. It doesn’t define you. Listen, instead, to the inner voice of Love who calls you out of this world and into the life of God. It is the voice of Jesus, the living Spirit of Love, alive in the deep, inner center of which you become aware in unguarded moments when you most feel that which you most need.

Times come, moments when sorrow or pain, need or beauty, simple kindness or gentle affection tugs our hearts into the way, the truth and the life of Jesus’ self-giving love. So often, small moments, infinitesimal instances are the most profound, the most pristine. They speak in unexpected ways and unlikely places, like in a parking lot when you realize what life is and what it is for.

 David L. Miller

Wednesday, May 10, 2023

Washed in the waves

 Do not let your hearts be troubled. Believe in God, believe also in me. In my Father’s house there are many dwelling-places. If it were not so, would I have told you that I go to prepare a place for you? And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again and will take you to myself, so that where I am, there you may be also. (John 14:1-3)

I liked hearing the preacher last Sunday. I’d not been to church in four months or so and for the most part had not missed it. Worship had grown stale. Sunday morning had become a desolation of the heart, drowning love and joy in the stagnant waters of formalistic routine.

Don’t get me wrong. I love the church’s historic liturgy, music and rituals that invite reverence, praise and gratitude for graces given. They connect us with the people of God from ages past, not to mention the God who is our help and hope in every age.

This was exactly what I was not finding, no matter how much I threw myself into the hymns, prayed along with the intercessions and opened my heart to the homily. Sunday to Sunday, I left the sanctuary less alive and able to love than when I entered.

I blame no one. My experience is just that. Mine. Others may have left the same service feeling the fresh wind of the Spirit blowing through their hearts. Not me. I spent despondent Sunday afternoons, wanting the tears and joy that come so freely when I sit in my morning chair and open my Bible to savor the image of Jesus, feeling the tenor of his voice awaken Love’s presence in my heart.

Last week, my prolonged absence from the gathered people of Jesus became too heavy to bear. I searched for a place I could be an anonymous face in the crowd, unknown except to the Love who was calling me home. I longed for a place I could be just one more face at Jesus’ table, one more pair of empty hands eager to receive his food and drink, one more voice confessing its sins, one more heart hoping to leave the sanctuary lighter and more alive for having been there.

I searched church websites for a place to go, but my Saturday evening scrolling turned up nothing promising. Sunday morning, I arbitrarily decided to drop in at a place Dixie and I regularly pass as we run errands. It was the church shopping equivalent of opening the Bible and blindly pointing at a page, hoping to find a word to address whatever distress you are feeling at the moment.

Sometimes it works.

Happiness met me at the door as a group of children, white, black and brown, spring carnations in hand, prepared to process into the sanctuary as the music of Handel floated through the door. I took my place, sitting as far from the front and as out of the way as possible. A priest of indiscernible ethnicity, at least to me, entered and addressed us as I pawed through the hymnal.

I missed much of what he said. His staccato jumbled into a tangled mass as I struggled with an unfamiliar accent. But as the liturgy went on, it didn’t matter. I understood everything I needed to hear and I suspect everything he wanted us to understand, as he smiled and turned smoothly from one element to the next.

Undulating waves of affection flowed back and forth across the room, rising and falling and returning again and again, like breakers on the shore, each wave washing over the gathered souls, dissolving the boundaries between us. Awash in a single sea, we rose and fell with each surge and swell, joined in the love flowing from the leader’s joy across the room and back again in rhythmic sway.

No one was excluded, not the youngest children nor the most elderly. We were caught up together, gathered as one, praying the prayers, singing the songs and listening to the plain words and unadorned sentences of a simple message inviting us to trust the Love who wants us, the Love who promises to come to us and for us wherever we are, even when we die.

I dropped into church hoping to find something for myself, only to be caught up in this sea of love, one with everyone else in the room. Sometimes I think of God as an all-embracing field of energy, the energy of love, everywhere active, drawing us and everything else into one great love, one harmonious wholeness. This is what I felt in that room on a Sunday morning, for which I thank God—the priest, the musician and most certainly the carnation-bearing children who brought tears to my eyes.

It occurs to me that my Sunday morning experience is not just a moment but a revelation, an incarnation of what all of reality is. We live and move and have our being in this great field of Love who struggles against all odds and our worst instincts to pull us toward each other—or at the very least to hold us and every whirling thing from flying off in every direction.

It’s a complicated thought, and I think there is some truth in it. But it all starts with the clear, simple words I leaned in to hear as Love’s waves washed over us. Don’t worry, the words said. I want you. I’ve got you. I will bring you to where I am. I want you with me, no matter what.

David L. Miller

Sunday, April 30, 2023

The wind blows where it wills, and you hear the sound of it, but you do not know whence it comes or whither it goes; so it is with every one who is born of the Spirit.” (John 3:8)

Impossible

Impossible. Impossible to predict. Impossible to control, altogether free, appearing where it will, this surge of love wells within, flooding me whole, rendering anything other than love impossible.

Love blows, Love flows, today through a mundane moment of memory: A young woman, 15 minutes out of cosmetology school, awkward and unsure, attempted to cut my hair as I sat in the chair, increasingly anxious over her ever-deeper snips, wondering what I would see in the mirror when she was done.

The cut lasted … a long time.

Two months later, the memory of her unleashes a flood of love for an anxious human heart trying to make her way, find her place, gather her confidence, the stumbling of a spring colt trying to find its feet in a wide pasture. Such beauty, and one way or another, we’ve all been there, little knowing how beautiful our fledging efforts are in the heart of God.

But why? Why do such unpredictable moments open the soul’s inner doors releasing a rush of love beyond any you sought or intended?

Or today? Why does a great hawk—riding the currents above Greene Valley, hundreds of feet above the East Branch of the DuPage, gliding, circling, searching—awaken a wordless wave of love and gratitude flowing free from a place within I don’t control?

What is this Love that is so truly in me, closer than my breath, yet so far beyond and greater than anything I can create or command? Who is this Love whose smile surrounds me as the doors of my heart are swept open, and for one blessed moment that Love and me are one, not two—and I know that it is for this that we are each created?

The Spirit blows where it wills, Jesus says. You never know when it will blow through your day or how it might surprise you, to say nothing of the myriad ways it has shaped your life without you knowing a thing about it.  

On our best, most blessed days, we are awake just enough to welcome Love’s breezes blowing through our lives. When you do, don’t do anything. Just stand there, wherever you are, and feel it. Say a quiet thank you; then let Love do whatever it wants with that heart of yours.

David L. Miller

Tuesday, April 25, 2023

Then the women said to Naomi, “Blessed be the Lord, who has not left you … . He shall be to you a restorer of life and a nourisher of your old age.” (Ruth 4:14-15a)

The One who is Always

Seek beauty. Hold it fast. Love sings its holy name in every exquisite moment that we may know the Love who always is, wanting only for us to know there is an always, as our times so quickly pass.

That Always shines in Naomi’s old eyes, as she gazes into the face of an infant, cradling the future of her family and our lives in her arms.

The child is Obed. No reason for you to know him, except that he became the father of Jesse, the father of King David, a man whose passions for life, love and God made him more beloved than any leader in Israel’s long history, despite his wayward appetites. They remembered even 1000 years later when Jesus’ rode into Jerusalem on a donkey, hailing him as the Son of David.

Naomi could not have dreamed any of this as she held the child of Ruth, her daughter-in-law. She only knew that her hard history—losing a husband and two sons amid famine and flight—had finally found some redemption, a reason to hope as she looked into the child’s eyes trying to imagine what dreams might still find fulfillment.

Perhaps … the One who is Always was not done with her …. or with anyone.

Imagining her, watching her hold the child, it is impossible to know what is more beautiful, the light in her eyes, the curve of the infant’s cheek or the flame of hope fired in her old heart.

Who knows what is yet to come, what beauty and wonder remains to be born, not Naomi nor any of us? The other day Dixie showed me a snapshot of me holding grandson Ben. He in a blue onesie, maybe two months old, his dark Latin eyes fixed on my blues, the capture of a single moment never to be repeated exactly the same way again, printed on paper, engraved ever-more deeply in my heart. And hope? What heart can hold it all?

Next month that black-haired infant in a onesie graduates high school, his eyes as alive as ever, and mine, like Naomi’s, filled with love and hope that only beauty can birth, beauty born of the Love who is Always, always with us, always beyond us, breaking open our hearts to love and hope beyond our wildest expectations.  

David L. Miller

 

 

 

 

Monday, April 17, 2023

Learning to hear

 Just after daybreak, Jesus stood on the beach; but the disciples did not know that it was Jesus. Jesus said to them, ‘Children, you have no fish, have you? (John 21:4-5a)

Perhaps the greatest change in the life of my spirit is one of hearing. The voice of Jesus has so taken on love’s timbre that any given word or syllable, no matter how seemingly mundane, can evoke unexpected tears of consolation, flooding my being with the simple awareness of a profound, nameless love, intensely personal yet having neither shape nor image within the darkness that surrounds it on every side.

I read the ancient words, watching what Jesus does and listening to what he says, hoping to feel the heart from which they flow, knowing he is the face of the Holy Darkness, this inexpressible Love, who bathes the heart in peace. So, listen, as the risen Jesus suddenly appears to his friends on the lakeshore.

Children, you have no fish, have you? How should we hear Jesus’ words? Maybe as a simple statement of fact: They’ve caught nothing. But perhaps the words carry an echo of sympathy: You caught nothing, so there’s no breakfast on the beach. Or maybe there is a measure of reproof: “You have no fish, have you?” My boyhood heart was well-schooled to hear words like these as one more criticism that I had forgotten or done something wrong, again, no matter what I happened to be doing at the moment.

But imagine these words emerging from a sly smile with a lilt of affection. Imagine saying them to a disappointed grandchild to whom you are about to give a gift that will bring them delight. Imagine the delight you will feel, knowing what you are about to do and the joy it will bring them. Imagine the ache of love you feel for them, the love no words can express.

Just imagine. Feel the joy of loving, the deep beauty of your humanity. And right there, in the mystery of your own inscrutable heart, you will hear the heart of Jesus beating within your own breast, bathed in peace, enveloped in the Holy Darkness whose name is Love.

David L. Miller  

 

Friday, April 14, 2023

On the road

 

As they came near the village to which they were going, [Jesus] walked ahead as if he were going on. But they urged him strongly, saying, ‘Stay with us, because it is almost evening and the day is now nearly over.’ So he went in to stay with them. When he was at the table with them, he took bread, blessed and broke it, and gave it to them. Then their eyes were opened, and they recognized him; and he vanished from their sight. (Luke 24:28-31)


Stop here. I don’t want to walk on. I need time to stand still and look around, time to feel and name this longing for Love’s living nearness. The day has come and gone, yet I wait for Easter unborn to dawn once more, pouring eternity’s light into this heart so that I truly know who I am, from whence I come … and to whom I go, lest I get lost on the road.

Longing for what I cannot give myself, hoping for healing as my 71st year around the sun passes before my eyes, I seem little more than life’s spectator as one body part or another resists my will, at least for now.

Walking this road, I see them on theirs, three of them, standing in the middle of a dusty, footworn path, the sun sinking west on a warmer than normal spring day. Who really knows if it was warm or cold, cloudy or clear? For now, I see them as I see them, two men with Jesus, their hopes dashed, heartbroken, but feeling something else, something they couldn’t name and couldn’t let go.

So, they prayed the only words that came to heart, “Stay with us. Don’t go.” They didn’t know much. They didn’t know what or who they were asking. But they were certain of this: Being with him out there on the road was better than being anywhere else without him.

And that is still true. So, stay with me, Lord Jesus. Stay when it is night, when darkness clouds my heart and I long for the dawn. Stay with me when I lose my bearings and forget all the ways you have loved me on this journey. Stay when I need to stop and look around to catch up with my feelings or let them catch up with me. Stay when I am angry or sad and forget that you are always here.

Stay with us. Break open the bread of your abundant heart. Open our eyes and fill them with tears of knowing that your love lives, out here on the road.

David L. Miller

Saturday, April 08, 2023

 One more time

Jesus, knowing that the Father had given all things into his hands, and that he had come from God and was going to God, rose from supper, laid aside his garments, and girded himself with a towel. Then he poured water into a basin, and began to wash the disciples’ feet, and to wipe them with the towel with which he was girded. (John 13:3-5)

Hands and feet, water, a basin and towel. Blessed are those who have eyes to see holiness where it is pleased to appear, as in this hunted man as he kneels on a stone-cold floor and washes feet.

This is the last time Jesus will be alone with his friends before his enemies scourge him body and soul and hang him out to dry, an object of derision. He has one more time to love them, to touch them body and soul, hoping to open their hearts to everything that is in his God-haunted heart.

To remember, we gather and tell the tale one more time, imagining ourselves cloistered with him in that little circle as he pours water into a bowl of sun-burnt clay and ties a long cloth around his waist.

One knee on the cold stone, he grasps a foot, my foot, your foot, in his right hand, cups water from the basin and washes the dirt of living from the arch and sole. His eyes fix on his work, ours on his hand as water spatters back into the bowl, our hearts heavy with a lifetime of fears and regrets, betrayals and hurts, hectored by our failures to be everything we or someone else thought we could’ve, should’ve or might’ve done and been, if only … .

But none of that seems to matter here. All that matters is the hands and heart of Jesus, whose love requires him to kneel at the feet of the weary and unworthy, reverently touching us with the love that fills him from the great Loving Mystery with whom his heart is one, tenderly touching and washing away our suspicion that we are adrift in a universe uncaring, a world where our little lives don’t much matter.

And this … is who God is.

Jesus upends everything commonly thought about who God is and what God is about. It’s all turned upside down. Any heart who hungers for God best looks not for a high and mighty unmoved mover far distant from their flesh. Look, instead, at this man moved to his knees by a great, unconquerable love, loving his friends to the end despite their faults and failures, their betrayals and failure to grasp the love that was reaching to them in his every word and gesture.

The more human we see him, the more divine we know him.

David L. Miller

 

 

 

Friday, March 10, 2023

The great beauty

Therefore I tell you, the kingdom of God will be taken away from you and given to a people that produces the fruits of the kingdom (Matthew 21:43)

In every goodness, every graced smile and every beauty of the human heart, the kingdom of the Loving One is known, regardless of the doctrine believed or denied.

Graced are we, if we have eyes to see it. For then, every moment is an occasion for knowing the heart of God melting the icy cynicism that chills our hearts. Graced are we, too, if the love’s embers spark a tender flame for the crying needs that crowd the news any time you risk watching.

The Spirit, Jesus says, blows where it will, and we don’t control it. But we surely know Love’s Spirit when its breeze brushes our flesh and opens our heart.

We know when we feel gratitude for the holy privilege of being alive and when love for this earth and its troubled inhabitants bubbles within. We know when the world’s most bitter suffering awakens the heart’s most gracious impulse. We know when the simplicity of human grace and care awakens the beauty we hide and moves us to share whatever share of it still lives within us.

The blessed kingdom for which we long and desperately need comes only as we open our hearts to give and receive the Love who comes in every love and every beauty. Its beauty appears when we seek for others the kindness and justice we naturally want for ourselves. And it is blocked whenever we indulge our egos or demand our rights as if there were no higher call.

The kingdom’s great beauty shines in the crucified Jesus, who refuses his rights in the name of loving enemies and forgiving those who have no right to anything but his rejection and condemnation.

But it also belongs to those who hunger and thirst for that love, not only for themselves but for everyone and everything, everywhere. Lord only knows, most of us do a lousy job of loving that way, our best efforts stumbling at best.

But the desire to know and share the sweet fruits of this love are a sure sign the Spirit’s untamable winds are blowing. And blow they will, so often revealing God’s loving rule in places and people whom you’d least expect, even in yourself.

David L. Miller

 

                          

 

Tuesday, March 07, 2023

 Images

Jesus our Lord … was handed over to death for our trespasses and was raised for our justification. (Romans 4:24b- 25)

Images imprint themselves on our hearts. We recall them when we hunger to remember and feel what we most need. So it is that I often recall a painting of Jesus blessing a gaggle of children. It hung on a gray, concrete wall in a long-ago Sunday school room. I remember because I was and always will be one of those little ones in need of his blessing.

Perhaps that is why the image of a twisted crucifix has also engraved itself on my heart. A dark-skinned Jesus hangs heavily on the nails, leprous and lifeless, his desiccated body shredded by torture. I saw it in a Spanish cathedral and couldn’t bring myself to take a picture of it. It’s too brutal, too troubling. But I cannot forget it. Every year since, I find it on the internet and let it take me in.

Looking at it, I see the suffering of forgotten people in places I will never be. I feel the Love who embraces them all and forgives everyone, everywhere, everything. And I weep, loving the One who bears shame and rejection that I may know the Great Heart for whom our aching hearts long.

David L. Miller

 

 

Sunday, February 05, 2023

Always enough

For [the Lord] did not despise or abhor the affliction of the afflicted; he did not hide his face from me, but heard when I cried to him. (Psalm 22:24)

A lazy afternoon. “Sorry I’m so quiet,” Dixie sighs, looking up from her book. “I’m not much company today."

“It’s alright,” I respond. “Your presence is enough.” And it is.

It’s enough to know she is here with me, and I am not alone, like so many who have lost their loves. It is for this, after all, that we are made, not the state of marriage necessarily but to know and share the comfort of other hearts.

Wonderfully human, this need. It stirs our hunger for others and for a much greater heart who is loving, powerful and near, a Blessed Presence who doesn’t run away or hide when we are hurt or afraid, forgotten or rejected.

We fly into the mercy of God on the wings on this need. Like so many of old and Jesus himself, we pray our distress, begging to feel the beams of Love’s presence enfolding and holding us near. Hungry to be heard, we call out to the One who never hides his face, who is always there and whose presence … is always enough.