Grace means suddenly youโre in a different universe from the one where you were stuck, and there was absolutely no way for you get there on you own.ย Anne Lamott
A few years ago, Jeanne surprised me for Fatherโs Day by taking me to a concert in Maryland by one of my favorite musicians. I discovered Fernando Ortegaโs music many years ago after plugging the name of one of the few Christian artists I can stand into Pandora. After playing a few of that artistโs songs, the Pandora elf decided that something by Fernando Ortega was close enough. The song, โGrace and Peace,โ caught my attention sufficiently for me to find some more of his musicโsuffice it to say that I now have over six hours of Fernandoโs music on a Spotify playlist. I brought all of my Fernando CDs to the concert and grinned like a groupie as the diminutive Ortega signed them.
This tune kept looping through my mind as I was away a few months later at a retreat in Minnesota called โPrayer in the Cave of the Heart.โ When at a retreat, Iโm always wondering what the take-away will be. What will this several day escape from real life give me that will be applicable to the daily grind when I return as I inevitably must? Two words kept jumping out at me during our liturgies and conversations at the retreat:ย Grace and Peace.ย
Which, of course, caused Fernandoโs setting to bubble up as I sat frequently in silent meditation with my twenty-or-so fellow retreatants. Grace and Peace. Iโve learned something about peace over the past decade as I have learned incrementally to trust my cave of the heart. I learned from reading Psalms with Benedictine monks that Psalmย 131 is a good internal retreat in times of stress:ย Truly I have set my soul in silence and peace. As a weaned child at its motherโs breast, so is my soul. And my heart rate slowsโevery time.
Grace is more of a challenge. I recognize moments of grace more clearly than I used to; using Jeanneโs spiritual vocabulary, I usually call them โBig Bird Moments,โ those times when, as Anne Lamott writes,ย suddenly youโre in a different universe from the one where you were stuck, and there was absolutely no way for you get there on you own.ย But the philosopher in me wants to explore grace, to define it, to map out the lay of the land of grace.
How does one tap into the transcendent energy of unexpected gratuitous moments in order to energize all the days, weeks and months until the next Big Bird moment? As Christianย Wiman writes,ย To experience grace is one thing; to integrate it into your life is quite another. That, perhaps, expresses better than anything else why I write this blogโhow does one build a daily life around occasional grace?
As Jeanne and I watched my favorite Christmas movie, โThe Nativity Story,โ for the umpteenth time a couple of weeks ago I was reminded that at the heart of what I believe is a foundational story of grace and peace. Given that human beings have turned Christmas into one of the most stressful, hectic, and unmanageable seasons of the year, it is easy to forget that the original story is wrapped in simplicity and human ordinarinessโbut infused with transcendent grace.
Thatโs how I think grace happensโit emerges in the most ordinary corners of our reality, taking its time and surprising us when we discover that nothing has changed, but everything has changed. There were probably more animals at the manger than humans; in โThe Nativity Storyโsโ beautiful rendition very little is said. โGod made into flesh,โ one of theย magi whispers. โHe is for all mankind. We are each given a gift,โ Mary tells an old, grizzled shepherd, encouraging him to touch the newborn child. And weย areย each given a giftโincarnated grace. Thatโs the mysteryโGod continues to use human flesh to be the divine conduit into the world.
I hope during this holiday season that you have the opportunity, whatever you believe, to look for moments of grace. They are everywhere.
Grace and peace to you from God our Father, and the Lord Jesus Christ