‘Do I look on
blindly and say I see the way?’
From ‘Close to the
Edge’ by Yes (from the Album ‘Close to the Edge’)
As is well known to my friends, I
am a great admirer or the rock band King Crimson and their guitarist (and only original
and constant member) Robert Fripp. One of Fripp’s solo pieces is entitled ‘Sometimes
God Hides’. When I first came across it, I was a bit unsure of the title. From
my perspective as a Christian, I was thinking that surely God is in the
business of revealing himself and not hiding himself.
But then, consider these words from
Isaiah 45 vs 15; ‘Truly you are a God who hides himself’.
Hmm…
Sometimes when we are most desperate
to see God, feel God, welcome God’s ‘intervention’, have God answer our
prayers, God can indeed seem very hidden indeed. Distant, or even absent, and often
silent.
Distant.
Absent.
Silent.
I have said before in sermons
that there are so many incidents in Scripture in general and in the Gospels in particular
where God is absent. This warrants further study! But that must wait for the moment.
Is God hiding?
Part of the reflections
appropriate to this season of Advent involve us asking about our waiting for
God to fulfil his promises, our longing for the light to fully come and dispel
the darkness, our hope that our prayers might at last be answered, and so on.
Is this God hiding?
If so, why? What does it mean for
us?
Or do we just not see him?
I have some thoughts and some ideas
about that, but a blog post is probably not the place to get into all of this.
However, I suspect that many people
of faith will have known times when at the very least it seemed that God
was hiding.
And it occurs to me that even as God
revealed himself in the birth of Jesus, it was extremely low key and somewhat incognito.
Bethlehem? A stable (or perhaps a ‘spare room’)? A manger?
A hidden revelation?
And then the flight of the
refugee family to Egypt… into ‘hiding’.
So, all worthy of some thought
and some reflection, I reckon.
The hiding God.
And, when, at the Wedding at Cana
of Galilee, Jesus told his mother ‘my time has not yet come’, does that perhaps
give us another wee clue into this whole mystery of the God who sometimes
hides?
I loved this, David. Thank you. It's food for thought, as always. The Giles Fraser piece was most encouraging, too!
ReplyDeleteThank you Roger. As yet, my thoughts on all this are not fully formed. But I have thought about it all a great deal. Still pondering!
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