A Hidden Grace

It was dusk, and I had forgotten where I was

Not literally, of course. I was on my way to pick up my son from school, and having passed through the low marshland I began to traipse up the hill approaching the back school yard. But my mind was elsewhere, distracted. Likely somewhere between the states of Arizona, Georgia and Pennsylvania

It was November 5th, two days after the US election. And there was a lot in the air. 

For days, I had been refreshing an electoral map that changed, state by state, by single digit percentages, if that. In between habitual refreshing of the map and news stories, I endlessly consumed the outrage, disgust, despair and then, fragile hope, on display in my social feeds. 

Closer to home, viral cases had begun to jump exponentially. That morning a nearby elementary school had registered yet another outbreak. Collective thoughts were turning more frequently to the heightened regulations and restrictions that would surely soon be coming. 

In response to both viral cases, and political upheaval, and tethered to my phone as I was, I began engaging in online arguments with both acquaintances and strangers. Tense conversations about the balance between civic responsibilities and freedoms, about disputed numbers and scientific models, about what constitutes safety and acceptable risk.

That evening as I trudged towards my son’s school, anxious thoughts of Trumpism and anti establishment skepticism blurred together, making the moment even more precarious in my mind. I shivered against the crisp evening air, and habitually I pulled out my phone and refreshed the election map, one last time. 

And then suddenly, a great furor of noise encircled me. 

Startled, I looked around, squinting and unable to find the source. My eyes were temporarily blinded by the glare of my phone’s screen as I stared into the near dark. And then it came into the view: against the backdrop of the fading sky, a great mass of red wing blackbirds moving as a single coordinated, unpredictable cloud. Slowly my eyes began to identify individual birds, circling and weaving between the cattails.

It suddenly occurred to me how silly it was that the birds had startled me. They were hardly quiet now, their chorus of chirps audible amongst the tumult of beating wings. Had they been silent and still as I had descended into their home? Or had I been sleep walking? So lost in thought that I had stumbled into another world without realizing it. 

The phone slipped back into my pocket. And concerns of US elections and viral cases and online arguments were far away from me again. I stood on that hill, held by that moment. Still, staring, and listening. And realizing where I was.

A few weeks earlier I had decided to memorize Wendell Berry’s poem, “The Peace of Wild Things”. I was not feeling at all at peace, and It had been featured by the On Being Project, read by Berry himself. The poem is eleven lines long, and read slowly in less than a minute. From the moment that Berry intones his first words “When despair for the world grows in me…” I knew that the poem was for me, and many of us, in this moment. 

In the poem, Berry conveys the unique peace that nature possesses and can lend us. In the night, when assaulted by anxious thoughts, the poet leaves his home and lies down in the grass, where the “wood drake rests in his beauty on the water, and the great heron feeds”. Amongst nature, the poet gains the “peace of wild things”, but only for a time. For in the end, the poet does not proclaim a final victory over despair or sleepless nights, but only that “for a while, I am held by the grace of the world, and am free”. 

And there I was, suddenly free myself. Held, momentarily by the hidden grace of that moment, that I stumbled upon. Caught up in something that felt so strange and otherworldly. But of course, was very much a part of our world, occurring outside of my notice in the twilight of each and every evening. 

Despite the fact that I no longer go to church, I found myself thinking of the words of Jacob in the book of Genesis. In that old tale, Jacob falls asleep in the wilderness at dark, and in his dream he sees a ladder extending up into heaven, and angels ascending and descending. And after he is blessed and reassured by God, he awakes. And Jacob marvels to himself:  “Surely the LORD was in this place, and I did not realize it”. 

This story is more than 3000 years old. And any story that old is loaded with meaning, importance and interpretations that others have placed upon it, long before it ever reaches our ears. 

But that story has survived for a reason. 

Now, you may not believe in God or angels (or ladders, I don’t know you…). But this was a story of a man finding himself face to face with a much larger reality than he realized. A place that was sacred and alive when he thought it was ordinary and desolate. A story where his world became much bigger, and his previous concerns much smaller. And one where he was still blessed and accepted. And as I stood there stunned and still and free, it felt like my story too.

On this we can agree: that there is a whole world, that we think of as ‘other’, below, above, and outside of our distracted attention. That beyond our notice is a world where redwing blackbirds, or heavenly messengers are ascending and descending. Where the voice of the Divine, or a chorus of chirps and beating wings can bless us and remind us that we belong. 

And that belonging, is grace.

Sometimes, we think of grace as solutions to our problems. The things we fret about are resolved. There is political cooperation and coordination, where before there seemed only discord and chaos. A virus’ spread and cost is halted by reliable and rapid testing, and the distribution of an effective and safe vaccine. An online argument is resolved, as each participant thanks the other for bringing a new and thoughtful perspective.

But sometimes (and most often), grace comes as the simple dawning awareness that there is a world larger than our concerns. A world that does not need us, but welcomes our observance and participation. The moments where we realize this are sacred to us, because they are often hidden below our attention. 

How often, in our forethought of grief do we walk right into and through, a world waiting to capture our attention. Waiting to lend us a moment’s peace. To cast our anxieties far from us. And to cast us in a production far bigger and wilder than ourselves. 

A hidden grace, waiting to hold us and make us free. 

If only just for a little while. 

2 Comments

  1. Love this tying old and new worlds together in wonder

  2. matr

    November 17, 2020 at 9:14 am

    Thanks Shannon!

    Me too! It’s liberating to re-examine (or even just be reminded of) these passages that used to mean so much, and I left alone for a while.

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