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The Pondering Heart
by David Morrison
"...His mother kept all
these things in her heart. And Jesus increased in wisdom and stature,
and in favor with God and men"
-Luke 2:51b-52
Mary's life, though briefly narrated in the Gospels, is filled with
profound and prophetic meanings. Among these is her life as a
contemplative: one who is bent on pondering the heart of God and gazing
upon Him and simultaneously engaging the realities of our world. From
the beginning, when the Angel appeared to her, Mary "considered what
kind of message this could be." Later, at the birth of her son, she
"pondered in her heart all that was said about Jesus." When she and her
husband, Joseph, took the eight day old Jesus to the temple to be
circumcised, and Simeon and Anna spoke the amazing prophesies over him,
they "marveled" in this same spirit of contemplative worship. Years
later, this heart of childlike wonder had not worn off as we find Mary
again "considering all these things in her heart" when she and Joseph
found their twelve year old son in the temple with the teachers.
When
a mother cradles her newborn, all she can do is gaze upon the face:
studying it, framing it in absolute affection, breathing in every
detail. When Mary gazed upon the infant face of Jesus, she was pondering
the very face of God: waiting for that sacred moment when his eyes would
open for the first time on earth. Her very natural action as a mother
teaches us the way of intimate communion with God. When Mary communed
with her newborn child, she saw the Creator of all things in
creation itself. With regenerated hearts by the work of the Holy Spirit,
we too, have the grace to see the Creator, the Word, in the entire
created realm. With this daily renewed vision, we are properly equipped
to engage the world. In observing the icon of the Virgin of Vladimir
(shown above), Henri Nouwen profoundly noticed that:
Her eyes look inward and outward at once. They look inward to
the heart of God and outward to the heart of the world, thus revealing
the unfathomable unity between the Creator and the creation. They see
the eternal in the temporal, the lasting in the passing, the divine in
the human. Her eyes gaze upon the infinite spaces of the heart where joy
and sorrow are no longer contrasting emotions, but are transcended in
spiritual unity (from
Behold the Beauty of the Lord: Praying with Icons by Henri J.M.
Nouwen).
Interesting enough, the New Testament Greek word for "ponder" is "sumballō,"
which bears a contrast in meanings. "Sun" is rooted in a "combining" or
a bringing together, while "ballō" refers to a "casting out." Our life
of prayer is essentially, an inward gaze upon the heart of God (taking
in all of his beauty into our souls), and looking through this lens
outwardly upon our world, and broadcasting this light upon it through
our perspective. Prayer is a breathing in of the presence of God
(combining all his attributes within us), and then breathing this
outward upon our world through responsive acts of obedience. This spirit
of pondering allows us also to combine all the wonders of God's truth
into our hearts and to cast out the illusions to which the world
constantly tries to draw us into with it's offerings of grandiose, but
shallow claims and tinny promises.
The
conventional wisdom of modern rationalism would tell us that the reason
the four Gospels don't elaborate on the rest of Jesus' life from age
twelve to thirty is that it isn't "pertinent" to his "mission" of
salvation. I think the absence of record is more of an invitation into
the mystery of Jesus' hidden life. The pondering heart is sustained by a
wonderment and continually renewed amazement at God. The short sighted
vision of "facts only" tends to restrict God's saving plan to the single
event of the crucifixion alone. I think Jesus is our salvation in the
totality of his life on earth: His birth, his hidden life, his ministry,
his suffering, death, and burial. His saving and sanctifying grace is
perpetuated by his risen life in the reality of his ascension to the
Father. I think the very act of God becoming human and "being subject to
his parents" is his first action of redeeming our humanity. I used to
pray, "Lord, forgive me for my wretched humanity." Now, in the light of
his perfect humanity and divinity, I pray, "Lord, make me truly human."
So Jesus' "lost years" are just as important as the events recorded in
the Gospels. When I struggle with the sting of obscurity and I feel
marginalized and forgotten, I am invited to take up a pondering heart
and enter into the Lord's hidden life. At once, the lonely place of my
heart is filled with the company of Jesus, Mary, and Joseph living as a
family in their own anonymity and seeming insignificance; and then my
heart is filled with hope and communal joy.
There seems to be a threefold connection between Jesus "becoming subject
to his parents," Mary "considering these things in her heart," and Jesus
"growing in favor with God and man." Perhaps Mary's "pondering" enabled
the boy Jesus to be subject to her and his spirit of humility caused him
to "increase in wisdom before God and man." We nurture the pondering
heart within ourselves by listening and respecting the contemplations of
others: especially our family members and those with whom we live in
community. As this mutual humility is engaged, our contemplative lives
spill outward and become a real service to those around us; and we
experience the joy of sharing the increase of wisdom and favor before
God and man.
Prayer:
Lord, sustain in me a pondering heart like mother Mary's: In humility
and blessed ordinariness. Keep me in a spirit of childlike amazement and
teach me to gaze inwardly into your eyes, so that I may see through
those eyes the world in which I live. Amen.
-David |