Jesus answered, ‘For this I was born, and for this I came into the world, to testify to the truth. Everyone who belongs to the truth listens to my voice.’ Pilate asked him, ‘What is truth?’ (John 18:37a-38)
My friend, Kevin, tells me he has become the
archetypal old man. Every morning, he sits on his porch with a cup of coffee,
lights a cigarette and watches the squirrels wake up, while thinking about the
past.
I wonder what he sees there. Next time, I’ll ask.
This morning, the question rebounds to me, and an answer springs to technicolor
life in my mind’s eye, a familiar scene, decades old, telling my heart what I
have lost and most want for the stretch of life that lies ahead.
One word: Simplicity. I hunger for the simplicity
of heart that was mine when I was nine or 10 or 11, running across the elysian
fields of the old fairgrounds near my childhood home.
Heaven was chasing my cocker spaniel across the emerald expanse, dandelions
sprouting across the meadow, as Blondie ran, her toenails ripping through the
grass, eluding my grasp at every turn.
And I laughed. I laughed at her joy, swept up in the rapture of running
free alongside and far behind, unrestricted and unrestrained, feeling the
exhilaration of being alive in a wide and open space where no one cared if I
laughed or shouted or prayed or sang at the top of my voice, songs from the
radio, others from church.
Those fields are the reason I love the stories of Jesus’ early ministry
so much. I can see him as he walked through grassy fields with his friends,
their palms running across the top of tall grasses, plucking the heads of wild
oats and eating them, talking, asking questions, stopping on a hill to gaze at the
waters of the Sea of Galilee, as the bluffs of Bashan paled to pink miles across
the water in the late afternoon sun.
I see them as people brought their children, and Jesus held them in his
arms, loving them, blessing them, as he raised his eyes to the heavens praising
the Loving Mystery for the song of birds, the yellow of flowers and the
tenderness of open hearts.
But that was then. Now, Holy Week is upon us; darkness settles in. The warm
sun of open fields is lost behind thick clouds of threat and gloom. The joy of beginnings
flees like a dream at the break of day, leaving only the nightmare. The air bristles
with anger and intrigue. Jesus is no longer a free soul on the hills of Galilee.
Sadness settles on his soul as furtive eyes surround him, waiting their time. He
is but a political problem, a pawn passed from one authority to another, each
seeking an expedience to be rid of him.
Night has come, and Jesus stands before his accusers, silent, but for
this. ‘I came into the world to testify to the truth,’ he says. And I ask the same question as Pontius Pilate,
‘What is truth?’
I don’t know whether he spoke with a sneer or with faint hope that Jesus
might say a little more, wondering against all odds that there might be an
answer to the question.
But Jesus just stands there, silent, for truth allows no words. Truth is
what filled me on the fields of my childhood. Truth is what swept my heart to
tears and songs and prayers and joy as love for life filled me from a Source
that I did not then and never will comprehend.
Truth is the divine smile that delighted in my play and warmed me whole
as I ran with my dog. Truth is the Love who filled me with graced awareness
that this Love, this Great Mystery, is real and knowable, and that my laughter
was the greatest praise I could ever return.
The simple truth is Jesus, the face of the Loving Mystery who forgives his
enemies, blesses those who curse him, prays for those who kill him, and still
has time to find young boys on the fields of their play. (Girls, too, I’m
sure).
It may be that I was closer to God at 10 than any time since. My
heart was simple then, and I knew … the truth that matters most.
David L. Miller
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