Whatever you're facing...
Heaven Can Begin Now
The Stoplight
Heaven is not built of country seats,
But little queer suburban streets.
Christopher Morley
The glimpses come when least expect them. When I'm not studying, not praying, not trying to
develop the discernment of a Father Brinckerhoff -- not thinking about heaven at all. Just,
all at once, there l am...
I was driving from our house to the village of Mt. Kisco one afternoon, as I do a dozen times
a week, with the usual list of errands --a package to be weighed at the post office, dry
cleaning to drop off. I was stopped by the traffic light at the edge of town. I was sitting
at the wheel, watching the cars turn onto Route 133 from Maple Avenue, waiting for the light
to turn and wondering how long the line at the post office would be, when suddenly... I was
filled with a nearly unbearable love for the people in every car I saw.
It actually ached, the yearning for each of them was so strong.
How gracious that driver signaling his turn! How patient the woman in the car behind him! How
infinitely valuable every driver, every passenger...
The light changed and the moment passed. How long did it last -thirty seconds? It was as if
for the blinking of an eye the curtain that shielded me from reality had lifted, and I'd felt
a fraction of what God felt as he brooded over that intersection.
If the curtain had not dropped again at once, I think the intensity of feeling would have
torn me apart. Nor could I sustain that love for other drivers; soon the roads filled again
with tailgaters behind me and dawdlers in front. But for one indelible moment, an utterly
ordinary scene had been, in a sense, unmasked: At the juncture of Route 133 and Maple Avenue
was the gate of heaven.
The Burning Bush
Earth's crammed with heaven
And every common bush afire with God.
And only he who sees takes off his shoes.
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
If the portals of heaven can swing open on a suburban street, they can open anywhere. It's new
eyes, not new settings, that make the difference.
Take off your shoes! God cautions Moses as he approaches the burning bush. The place where
you are standing is holy ground.
And where is this sanctified spot? Not in some splendid palace of Moses' youth. Not in one of
the awesome Egyptian temples he knew so well. The holy ground is an ordinary patch of desert
where Moses, as he does every day, is herding sheep. Just another rugged stretch of the
wilderness where he's fled, like Jacob, to escape trouble back home. But because Moses stops
and looks, he detects the presence of God.
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