I am sharing an "oldie but goodie" post one week earlier than planned to give my eyes more time to heal. They are already much better. So, in celebration of entering my 16th year of blogging, I repeat these ponderings from a few years ago.
I have a fascination with what Celtic Christians termed "the thin
places". That name originally given by pagans to locations where they
believed the boundary between Heaven and Earth is "thin". Then taken up
by those who follow the One True God to describe locations where it
seems easier to hear God speak to the hearts of men. Where it seemed
the very Breath of Heaven could be felt as the cool breeze rustled trees
on a hot, dry day.
I admit this term is often used in the New Age movement, too. However,
like so many things that God created... the enemy of our souls has a
copycat version. Which is why from the oldest of chapters in the Old
Testament, we are warned of the danger in following false gods. We
understand that we are not to worship the tree but the God who created
it.
I like to look at the Bible to see if there is anything similar to what
we find in this 21st Century (or Middle Ages) world. Of course there
is, only we do not call them thin places. They are called Mt. Sinai
where God spoke to Moses and Peniel where Jacob had the vision of the
ladder going between Earth and Heaven.
We cannot forget the Judean desert wilderness where John the Baptist
lived and our Lord experienced 40 days of praying to the Father and
being tempted by Satan. St. Paul was led to the Arabian desert for
three years after his conversion to Christianity to be taught by God
Himself. All places where one would be alone with God to hear Him
clearly.
There are more instances in the Bible where our ancient fathers and
mothers had experiences with God that were beyond the normal. We are
told that they often built altars to God on that particular place as a
remembrance of His presence.
Of course, both the Celtic Christians and those of us who are ever so
much more sophisticated know that we can talk to God and hear from Him
in any location. But I understand why the thin places would feel
special. I have often wondered if it was not so much the location
itself but the people who came to inhabit each place that made it
special, leaving an imprint of their own holy... albeit imperfect...
walk with God.
I do know that whether on an island off the shores of Scotland, a woods
in England, or on a mountain in Ireland... these places where it is said
one can hear from God are always in the seclusion of natural beauty
and... peace.
I know in my own life that in the darkest of days, I hear Him best
amidst the beauty of nature. There were many times in the past when I
prayed as I walked a trail in the woods or sat on the shore of Lake
Michigan with an open Bible... the silence brought His voice clearer and
the surrounding beauty sent my thoughts to Heavenly places.
The Bibles tells us that God inhabits the praises of His people.
Perhaps in the midst of the natural beauty surrounding those who came
before us... those who chose to live in remote areas to devote their
days to prayer... they brought Heaven closer to Earth.
The results of their prayers and devotion was the British Isles turning
from paganism to Christ. I have read that many of the Celtic Highlander
Scottish believers left their country during a time of persecution and
settled in North America and Australia. They arrived in America just in
time to help spark the Second Great Awakening.
These thin places as they are called, while beautiful in their
surroundings, were not always places of warmth and comfort. Especially
those islands off the coast of Scotland, Ireland, and England. The
brutally cold winds of winter would cut through one's home since many
were made from stone... before the days of thermal windows.
Sometimes I think those surroundings reflect our own life on this
planet. Our lives contain both seasons of great beauty and seasons of
harsh reality. There are days when we give praise to God as we enjoy an
obvious answer to prayer. Then there are the seasons when our prayers
seem to hit the ceiling and life continues one difficult day at a time.
But I'm thinking... and the more I ponder, the more I believe it... that
the harsh climate and the surrounding beauty were both needed to form
these men and women into the fierce warriors of God for which they are
known. Some prayer warriors... a few actual saints who went into
battle.
It is the same set of circumstances which transformed the place in which
they lived into a thin place... one where it was easy to hear from
God. Serious, continuing, and persistent prayer isn't needed in the
good times but oh, how we fall on our knees when the hurricane force
winds of adversity are whirling around us.
Perhaps that is why we have created our own thin places, where we hear
His voice easier. Not all of us can spend days hiking on trails, or
watching waves coming and going on a beach, or even sitting on the front
porch in a rocking chair watching the return of the forest birds during
a morning quiet time.
We are much more likely to pray as we wash the dinner dishes, change a
diaper, sweep the floor, sort the laundry, or wait for the children
during soccer practice. Many of the instances I most felt God's
presence was when I awoke in the middle of the night and moved to the
sofa, deeply burdened for a loved one or a national leader. Prayer came
easier in the darkness, with no distractions of everyday living.
In closing, I think often of Susannah Wesley raising ten children, whose
daily prayer ritual consisted of throwing her apron over her head to
get some alone time between this mother and her God. God took those
prayers as seriously as if they were asked from an altar in the greatest
of cathedrals.
Susannah could not travel to a mountain in Ireland or spend a week at a
retreat with like minded women but she helped change the world through
praying, as well as the rearing and education of her children,
especially John and Charles Wesley.
This should give each of us hope that God speaks to us right where we
are... as we search for the beauty that surrounds us in nature, in our
own home, or perhaps even in the people for whom we pray.
Image: Croagh Patrick in Ireland
1 comment:
the thin places..
a few years back i read these words but didn't know the origin nor did i delve in to learn the origin. i assumed (eye roll) the person using them had "created" the words and that was that. and now, thanks to you, i know the origin. the words spoke deep those years back and knowing the meaning i find them to speak deeper still. there are definitely thin places of life.
3am is God's hour in my life. it's not every night i wake at that early hour but when i do i know it's him. i either move myself to a darkened living room and sit on the couch (like you), or i remain cozy in bed - pray - and he takes me back to sleep. either way, it's a special time. a lovely time. a worthy time. to pray specifically. lately he's been waking me with a hymn or song. :)
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