Welcome to the 2001–2002 archives of Le Penseur Réfléchit, the Mr. Renaissance bi-weekly newsletter. You may also wish to peruse the current issues as well and you can have Le Penseur Réfléchit delivered to your inbox so that you never miss a single issue. Subscribing is free and your e-mail address will be used for the exclusive purpose of mailing these newsletters; it will not be sold or given out to anyone for any reason. Le Penseur Réfléchit is a not-for-profit production of Mr. Renaissance.
December 10, 2001
Hello everyone,
I was thumbing through the latest issue of Guideposts magazine (December 2001), when I stumbled across a Christmas story written by Madeleine L’Engle. Her name leapt out of the page at me for several reasons. Not only was I just discussing her writing with a friend at work, I have long been wanting to read her book Walking on Water, because of something Nichole Nordeman, one of my favorite Christian musicians, wrote about her. Speaking of her own album This Mystery, Nordeman writes:
The bulk of the inspiration of this project is owed to a woman whom I have never met personally, but feel as though I know intimately on the pages of her work. “Walking on Water” by Madeleine L’Engle should be, in my opinion, required reading for anyone who has ever tried to navigate the murky water where the worlds of faith and art still swim around together. Ms. L’Engle has given me a gentle nudge to remember and reclaim the innocence, naïveté, and mystery of my faith long before it got lost in the land of adult reasoning. Somehow, it seems, in the middle of contemporary (and ridiculously complex) Christianity, I lost sight of the mystery of God. Placing limits on where God moves, who God moves through, and dismissing whatever did not fit into the tiny framework and parameters that had become my religion. I am just now beginning to remember what it was like to be a child . . . when ALL things were possible with God, despite my criteria. I am beginning to feel the tremendous liberation in finding God far away from the usual places, and it is my hope that at least part of the joy of this re-discovery has spilled over into these songs. Many thanks to Ms. L’Engle and her very thoughtful book, for giving me permission, in the face of all things that demand a rational explanation, to shrug my shoulders and delightfully admit, “Who knows?”
Perhaps this is part of what draws me to Nordeman’s music. While her playing skills are well adept, it is her lyrics that most appeal to me. Consider this excerpt from “Help Me Believe”:
Am I too wise to recognize that everything uncertain
Is certainly a possibility?When logic fails my reasoning
And science crushes underneath
The weight of all that is seenWhen someone else’s education
Plays upon my reservations
I’m the first to cave
I’m the first to bleedIf I abandoned all that seeks
To make my faith informed and chic
Could You
Would You
Show Yourself to me?
“As iron sharpens iron, so one man sharpens another” (Proverbs 27:17). Ironic, isn’t it, how one generation influences the next? Nordeman, who is roughly my age and who has an impact on me, was impacted by L’Engle, who in turn undoubtedly was impacted by another, just as I am now (hopefully) impacting you. But you know what? Even when I was a child I said that I “had different eyes.” Mom and Dad used to tease me about this, and I reminded them about it the other day. I asked them, “Remember when I was about four years old and I would always say that I had different eyes? I knew what I was talking about then and still do.” I really do believe that life is all a matter of perspective, or nearly so, at any rate. And the beauty of L’Engle (as with the other artists I admire) is that they too see through different eyes: the eyes of a child.
You know, I did not realize I had read any of L’Engle’s writing, until I discovered that she had written A Wrinkle in Time. It has been years since I read that book—I couldn’t have been any more than twelve at the most—but parts of it left an indelible imprint on my mind. For instance, Siamese Clockwork owes its second stanza to that book; indeed, that book explained the theory of dimensional reality that I have long clung to, and now understand (if I am not mistaken) forms the framework of Einstein’s famous Theory of Relativity.
Very well, I’ll sign off before I end up writing an entire article of introduction. (An author, however inept, should never be asked to introduce a piece of writing by another author.) :) I hope you enjoy this Christmas story.
God bless,
Eric
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