I decided to interview
a few of my friends, mainly because this essay is a good excuse to broach the subject
of personal beliefs and hopefully hear some testimonies. To begin with I asked
some basic questions that each person had to answer and it was immediately evident
that the course of the interview would be drastically affected by the answer to
the first question: Do you believe in God? Sitting here silently typing,
absorbing, I was humbled by the trust that these girls had for me and as I
watched their lips move I could see how their spirits stirred within them.
Only one of my three
friends had a solid answer throughout the entire process, the other two consistently
settled with ‘I don’t know’s. I did not express this to my friends but their
mediocre answers were unsettling to me and it wasn’t until half way through the
questions that I realized how upset I was becoming. After some speculation I
have come to the conclusion that my stereotypically Christian upbringing has conditioned
me to react this way to responses that are anything less than conclusive.
It struck me that
these girls I was talking with, the girls I had surrounded myself with for my
entire time at Warner and who I considered my best friends, are for all
intensive purposes, strangers to me. I may have familiarized myself with their
vocal patterns, daily habits, senses of humor and eating preferences but the
real them, the fabric of their spirits, is completely unfamiliar to me. This
truth took me aback and I listened all the closer to their words.
One of my friends
told me about an experience she had with what she believes to be an angel and
how that experience has brought her faith to life in a way that she had not
previously thought possible. As she spoke the pitch of her voice gradually rose
and I was compelled to believe her if only because she was clearly still so
shaken by the experience. The more I think about this the more sure I am that
my response one of awe and jealousy. I have seen tragedy and joy, desperation
and hope, but I cannot think of a single experience in my entire life that
might lend me the emotion she was struggling to control that night, and I can’t
help but to wonder what that says about my life.
Another friend shared
that she had never believed in God but was open to the idea so she wagered with
Him that if He would prove Himself then she would follow him. That week she
went to a church to see her friend get baptized and she said “As soon as she
went underwater I was filled with this overwhelming sense of love…it was like I
was metaphorically baptized with understanding.” Again I found myself longing
for the intensity with which she spoke these words.
As I type I am
beginning to pick out a bit of a pattern concerning the stories that I heard
that night and the reactions that I had to them. Each story that I reacted with
jealousy towards had two elements in common; they all took place in a time of
uncertainty and they all involved God speaking to the person in question. I
think one of the reasons that I was so jealous about this is because I feel
like God hasn’t spoken to me like that in a very long time… then again each
person was spoken to in a way that catered to them specifically so it is
possible that He has spoken to me in a way that is more subtle those expressed
by my peers.
In any case I think
it is important to keep my eyes, ears, heart, and mind open to whatever God might
be saying to me because these stories have helped me to realize that He may be
speaking loud in clear, only I am not paying enough attention to notice.
Very powerful affirmation, especially the last paragraph!
ReplyDelete