“Great is
our Lord and mighty in power;
his understanding has no limit.” Psalm 145:5
I just
emptied my trash. There were 300 old
e-mails packed somehow within, and, with nothing more than a key-stroke,
they’re history. All those words are
simply gone, as if they’d never existed.
But where
do they go?—that’s what I’m wondering.
Isn’t there some law of physics that matter simply doesn’t
disappear? I suppose those 300 email
notes had no matter; they were nothing but electronic impulses of some kind. But even if they had no matter, they held
matter. I’m sure that sometime in the
next few days I’ll remember something I should have done, go to the trash file
to find some tossed note, and discover it and the horse it rode in on,
gone. At one time, they mattered.
But now
they’ve vanished, never to be seen again.
Strange. Almost scary.
An old
friend called last night, just to check in.
He said his wife, who’s been fighting depression for years, has switched
meds. “A scary time,” he told us, and I understand. What I don’t understand is how a pill can
actually change character, alter personality, replace the dynamo of whatever it
is that makes us each who we are. That’s scary. But it happens, and it happens
all the time.
And why
is it that I feel so much, of late, that I’d rather be alone than in the blessed
company of other people? Once we were
social. Once we looked forward to weekends
because they meant games and gatherings. I still look forward to weekends, but the only
frivolity I seek is peace and quiet and solitude. If the skies are clear, the
dawn compels on Saturday morning. I go alone. That’s the way I like it. Why?
Or this. Yesterday
in a crowded shopping mall I read a short story from a new collection, read it
almost straight though. I was sitting on
a bench near the food court, at the very heart of things. Thousands of people
passed me by. I saw few. It was a great story. I loved it. But I told myself
that something had changed in me. Ten years ago—certainly twenty—I could never
have sat there amid the thronging shoppers and focused so intensely on a single
short story. What has changed in me, and why?
There’s
so much I don’t understand.
Why do we
suffer—honestly? The older I become, the
more Job appears, just off my shoulder, one hand raised to heaven in a fist.
Three of my friends are dying of cancer; all of them would love to live. None
of them are ancient. Yet, all over North America people are building nursing
homes to tend the millions who would, any day of the week, volunteer tomorrow
for a long-sought trip to glory.
I was
born after the Second World War, but I’ve spent more time reading the
literature of the Holocaust than perhaps I should have. Arbeit
Macht Frei—there’s a sign in my mind that will never leave. I know where
Mengele stood right there at the platform as the trains rolled into Auschwitz.
I can see his hand determining. And even though I wasn’t there, I can hear
millions of bootless cries to heaven.
There is
so much I don’t understand about life and about death, about suffering and
joy. So much mystery.
And the
greatest of all is a gift because somehow, even though I don’t know, I’m
confident He does. Faith is a sumptuous gift. I don’t know why his grace comes
to me, but I believe this affirmation, that even though don’t get it, even
though this flesh will corrupt and I will like those emails, simply vanish, in
mystery, he knows.
His
understanding has no limit.
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