To listen in any serious way means
paying attention. The transfigured Christ and his companions on the mountain top
knew what this meant. Moses learned it at the burning bush, Elijah in his cave,
and Jesus in the desert. Peter had not yet learned it. He could not walk slowly
enough. This is one of the most important of life’s lessons. And I speak about
it this morning because on Wednesday it will be Lent, and Lent can be our
teacher, and I guess that we shall not learn about slowing down unless we have
some kind of discipline to guide us. Lent prepares us to celebrate the cross
and resurrection of Christ at Easter. This means knowing cross and resurrection
ourselves, paying attention to God’s work within us. This is more than a yearly
Lenten practice. St Benedict says that all of life should be Lent, reaching for
and growing towards the God who invites us to know him as truth and love. So I
am speaking about all our days, not just the forty days of fast that lie ahead.
But those forty days focus what all of life should mean. And one of its aspects
should be our ability to slow down and listen to what the voice of God has to
say to us.
In 1878 Mark Twain was in
Switzerland. He had climbed high up a
valley near Zermatt from where, below, was a glacier. He thought he might travel down with it:
I took up as good a
position as I could upon the middle of the glacier – because Baedeker said the
middle part travels the fastest. As a
measure of economy, however, I put some of the heavier baggage on the shoreward
parts, to go as slow freight. I waited
and waited, but the glacier did not move.
Night was coming on, the darkness began to gather – still we did not
budge. It occurred to me then that there
might be a timetable in Baedeker; it would be well to find out the hours of
starting. I soon found a sentence which
threw a dazzling light upon the matter.
It said, ‘The Gorner Glacier travels at an average rate of a little less
than an inch a day.’ I have seldom felt
so outraged. I have seldom felt my confidence so wantonly betrayed. I made a small calculation: one inch a day,
say thirty feet a year; estimated distance to Zermatt, three and one-eighteenth
miles. Time required to go by glacier, a
little over five hundred years! The
passenger part of this glacier – the central part – the lightning express part,
so to speak, was not due in Zermatt until the summer of 2378, and the baggage,
coming along the slow edge, would not arrive until some generations
later…. As a means of passenger
transportation, I consider the glacier a failure.
I am trying to learn, late in
life, that the race is not always to the swift nor the battle to the
strong. Ours is an age where speed is
everything. Wherever you turn, in
business, in industry, in education, even in the church, success is measured by
this: that you fill your diary, work every hour God sends, work both smart and fast. When I was in Sheffield and trying to
raise funds for the Cathedral, I asked a wealthy businessman to help. As he wrote out the cheque, he said to me:
‘Michael, it’s really important that the church models something different from
the hectic pace at which we in the public and private sectors expect to see
results. The cathedral has been here for
centuries. It has a perspective sub
specie aeternitatis: it looks at things from the vantage point of eternity.
It can help us take the long view, learn the meaning of patience.’ Perhaps this is what St Benedict meant by stability
in his rule for monks: not running feverishly from place to place either
physically or metaphorically, but being committed to the present where God has
placed us, living according to that long view.
A gift of Lent could be finding
equanimity, equilibrium, balance among the world’s destabilising, capricious changes
and chances. And help is at hand. If you go to www.notbusy.co.uk you will find resources
put together by Canon Cherry and Sacristy Press based on his book Beyond Business. The idea is to give up
business during Lent and regain control of our lives by living more at God’s
pace than our own. You can ever a wristband telling the world that you’re not
busy. For me, the first sign of success will be not to agree with anyone who
says to me ‘You must be so busy’. Indeed, authentic Christian ministry means
the very opposite: having time for other people and for God. I see this as the
work of love: ours for God and for others, but most of all, God’s love for us. If
Lent means anything, it should be that we become more aware of Love’s work in
us and all around us, and learn to live it for ourselves. As everyone who has
loved knows, love has its own speed. ‘It
is ‘slow’, yet it is lord over all other speeds. It goes on in the depth of our being, whether
we notice it or not, whether we have mountains to scale or torrents to span or
are crossing the quieter welcome prairies of our existence. If you ask me about
the speed God walks, I would say: Adagio,
lento, sometimes andante, but not often presto
or vivace; the still small voice,
not the earthquake, wind and fire.
It’s
true that occasionally, ‘he is such a
fast god’ as R.S. Thomas says: baffling, elusive, strange. But most of the time he is so slow his
movement is undetectable except to those who stay still for long enough. To see
it, we need to become more contemplative: sit on the glacier and travel at
God’s speed; lie prostrate on the mountain top and listen to the voice of glory. Try it this Lent: paying attention and seeing
into the life of things. It will bring to its relentless flow and flux the gift
of stability and peace. Love works
slowly but God has plenty of time. We
can afford to wait for him. Spring is
nearly here, Lent’s slow awakening, forty days for the wilderness to blossom, for
us to listen and pay attention and find a new happiness in our souls. For then
we shall know the hills where our life rose and the sea where it goes.
Durham Cathedral, 10 February
2013 (Sunday before Lent)
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