I regard everything as loss because of the surpassing value of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord. For his sake I have suffered the loss of all things, and I regard them as rubbish, in order that I may gain Christ and be found in him. (Philippians 3:8-9a)
The image is
crude and old, perhaps even childish. I hesitate to describe it, since it
exposes how simpleminded and unsophisticated I can be.
I intuit the
image as much as see it. It first appeared in my mind’s eye as an icon, a
vision (?) … decades ago. I see or sense Christ, the outline of his body. I
cannot see his face or features, just his arms slightly spread, and I am inside
the image, enveloped in him.
I can call it
to mind and feel almost nothing. But times come, like today, when it appears or
simply awakens, and I see and feel and know myself inside him, enclosed, surrounded,
safe within, my whole being bathed in a love that dissolves every anger, every
anxiety and every memory that assails my heart. And I have a lot of those.
‘You are my
freedom,’ I pray, during the blessed time of awakening, ‘my only real freedom.’
For I cannot
chase away the disparate memories that conspire and converge in the night to
accuse me of all the ways I have failed to be the human soul I wanted to be,
the soul I hoped and once imagined I might become.
My mind is
too weak to fight them off, and my heart is too honest to pretend it doesn’t
matter.
Funny, isn’t
it, how countless wonderful things can happen to you, and thousands of gracious
words can cross your lips to bless friends and family and even strangers in
decades of living. Often as not, these get filed in the dusty, disordered bottom
drawer of memory.
But miniscule
details from decades old moments of foolishness and vanity appear in lurid detail—impulsive,
stupid things I have done and said trying to look better than I am, thoughtless
anger and selfishness, ancient slights and rejections, the feeling that I have
never really fit in anywhere and have likely been unqualified for pretty much
every job I ever had, although I eventually figured out most of them.
But perhaps
this is only my experience. Perhaps there’s only a few of us whose hyperactive
memories point an accusing finger when desolating clouds descend on the heart.
But I don’t think so. I suspect I have a lot of company.
We cannot free
ourselves from this bondage, nor can we will our way to freedom. Only Love
casts out this demon. Only Love silences every other voice but its own.
And Love
constantly beckons us to come home, to see and find ourselves enveloped within
the body of Love he is. For Christ, his love is our home, and his body contains
and holds all of us and all creation, all that is … is in him, held in him, encompassed,
surrounded.
This is what I
see when some experience of beauty or love or grace or joy or even a child’s
smile awakens the image, and I see myself there, in Christ, along with everything
else.
Would that we
all might find ourselves in him, that loving freedom might come.
David L. Miller
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