Sometimes, when I scan my twitter
feed, or the blogs in my Google reader, I find myself saying, Platitude,
platitude, platitude. YES. Platitude. YES! Yes, I say, when someone expresses
an old truth in a fresh way, so that it strikes me afresh. Or shares a new
insight on an old truth.
What are platitudes? At best,
using someone else’s words and language to describe your own experience. At
worst, using someone else’s words to describe someone else’s experiences, which you have not yet experienced.
* * *
Matt Redman says, “Every authentic response in
worship comes from revelation. When you become a Christian, you commit your
life to God. And then from that moment on, everything you see of God,
everything that is revealed to you, everything you find in His Word, everything
you realize when you gather with the believers, every time you take a walk
under a night sky and gaze up at the stars above is revelation. It’s like fuel
for the fire of worship. Sometimes I find if my prayer life is not good, it is
because I have not been fueling the fire.”
In this amazing diverse world
of diversity, no two zebras have the same stripes, no two roses have the same
pattern, or snowflakes, or fingerprints, or the iris of eyes. Each African penguin has a unique spot
pattern on its chest, which zoo-keepers—and other penguins—soon get to
recognise.
God is always speaking, A. W. Tozer says. His voice rises above the din and
clatter of the world around us.
We unconsciously adjust our description
of an idea or experience to our audience. And so too, the Spirit who created
vast diversity reminds us of ancient
truths in unique words and images, differing in emphasis, colour and music, geared
towards each of our Myers Briggs personality, IQ, culture and life-experience, our
spiritual age, if you like, and our capacity to be changed by our insights.
And the fresh insights the Spirit
gives us, the new wine he pours, needs new
words, a fresh expression. New wineskins for New Wine.
* * *
Make it New
was Ezra Pound’s slogan, adopted by the Modernist movement.
To write
in the fewest possible words, as clearly as possible, exactly what one
meant—that was his only lesson in the art of writing, Virginia
Woolf wrote of her father, brilliant literary scholar Lesley Stephen, who sort
of home-schooled her.
We do not need to strain
after newness. By being brave and honest and telling the truth the way we see
it, we will be fresh. And by trying to say as clearly as possible,
exactly what we mean, in our own words, not anyone else’s, we will be unique.
And so no two Christian writers or bloggers
writing about prayer, or hearing God’s voice, or love should say the same thing
in the same way, because, you see, our experience will be slightly different. No two people will have an identical spiritual
experience; different things will strike each of us with gale force.
Last
season's fruit is eaten
And the fulfilled beast shall kick the empty
pail.
For last year's words belong to last year's
language
And next year's words await another voice
To purify the dialect of the tribe (T.S.
Eliot, Little Gidding)
When
I attempted a Blog through the Bible project last year, my daughter Zoe said dubiously, “Do
you know Mike Pilavachi is doing that too? Nicky Gumbel is doing that too?”
At first you feel why bother?
Nicky Gumbel is cleverer, theologically trained, more experienced. Why read me
if you can read him?
But God gives each of us unique circles of influence,
unique tribes. And our life-experience, personalities, and ways of expressing
ourselves speak to our own tribe, in a way someone else’s might not.
And so we continue “writing down the revelation and make it
plain that he may run who reads it,” (Hab 2:20), continue recording what we hear the Spirit say, even
while John, Mark, Luke Matthew, James, Peter, Paul, Nicky and Mike are doing it
too, and doing it better.
Fortunately, the eight
authors of the New Testament were not deterred by the fact that Paul and Luke
were clearly better educated and more intelligent and better writers than Peter
or Matthew or James or Mark, because all eight of them contribute richly to our
New Testament, and we each have a favourite book, and those who have no time
for Paul have a lot of time for John or Luke.
And vice-versa.
* * *
My post was originally posted on the Big Bible Project, as part of the Digidisciple initiative.
Anita,
ReplyDeleteThank you for a brilliant post.
I hadn't thought of each new revealing as Revelation, just an inspiration from the Holy Spirit, perhaps they're one and the same.
I blog sparingly, but write continuously, I'm not sure why, but I keep a journal of my experiences, some of which has helped me in the discernment process with the Church. The rest is a record of my journey of faith, since becoming a Born-Again (trite phrase, but descriptive of my experience) Christian some 5 years ago.
I love following blogs, because others perspective can give me new insights and contribute to my learning and understanding more about the Gospel and myself.
Hi UKViewer,
ReplyDeleteThanks much. I recently read sthg. about the importance of writing down our "visions," thoughts I've developed here. http://dreamingbeneaththespires.blogspot.com/2011/12/write-down-vision-and-make-it-plain.html
Do consider blogging more. I think blogs are part of God's love, guidance and revelation to the church, through the "communion of saints." Just part, of course, never displacing Scripture or prayer ;-) (lest I sound heretical!)
This is such encouragement to me. I will have to meditate on this. I had an idea similar to 1000 Gifts years ago, but felt like I shouldn't bother now...but maybe I should revisit? hmmmm....
ReplyDeleteDo revisit it. 1000 Gifts is a very capacious form for telling a story and Ann has a life-changing insight to share. But your book will be Kim's, not Ann's because you are Kim, not Ann. Follow the dream God has sown in your heart, and it will lead you along surprising paths, and to surprising places! Blessings, Anita
ReplyDeleteI reached a point last year being very discouraged in my writing, because my experiences were nothing like those of some of the blogs I was reading. There was even a couple I stopped following because they seemed so far above me I was feeling depressed by the comparison.
ReplyDeleteI've now realised all I can do is write about my own experience. And if what I'm learning is old news to everyone else so be it. And even if I only have 13 followers all I can do is to be faithful to my own journey.
Claudia, reading your comment makes me realise that all of us Christian bloggers just have to be honest about our struggles (and take the risk that we might discourage, rather than encourage people).
ReplyDeleteEach of us has our circle of influence God gives us, whom we uniquely touch. And I guess the parable of the talents,and real life experiences shows that the more faithful one is with sharing one's honest, real, spiritual lives and inspirations, the wider that circle of influence grows.
I am constantly trying to be more and more real and honest. Otherwise, there is little value in a spiritual writing ministry!:-)
You've given me much to think about!
ReplyDeleteOn a slightly related topic, I've heard that 1,000 Gifts took a Song of Songs-esque descriptor of her relationship to God too far. As you have read the book, do you have any thoughts about it?
Hi Leah,
ReplyDeleteWell, she has a highly poetic style, but no, I didn't find anything objectionable. The medieval female mystics use highly emotional, romantic, and even sexual imagery to describe their relationship with God!!
Great, thanks!
DeleteThanks for the interesting and challenging post. This quote is the most challenging for me: 'To write in the fewest possible words'!! I often think of a sentence and then end up writing a page! I catch myself every so often thinking, why should I post this - everyone knows it already. But then I remind myself that my goal is to write what God is teaching me, not what no-one else has heard. And I agree about the circles of influence - that often keeps me going where otherwise I would have given up. Thanks for linking up and for the encouragement to post that last post on my blog :)
ReplyDelete"God gives each of us unique circles of influence, unique tribes. And our life-experience, personalities, and ways of expressing ourselves speak to our own tribe, in a way someone else’s might not. "
ReplyDeleteThanks, needed to hear this today. :)
Thanks much, Rhoda and Florence!
ReplyDelete@Florence, welcome to my blog:-)