I believe that one of the reasons which prevent us
from being truly ourselves and finding our own way
is that we do not realise the extent to which we are
blind! If only we knew that we were blind, how
eagerly would we seek healing: we should seek it, as
Bartimaeus probably did, from men, doctors, priests,
healers; and then, having lost all hope 'in princes,
in the sons of men in whom there is no salvation',
we might, perhaps, turn to God. But the tragedy is
that we do not realise our blindness: too many
things leap to our eyes for us to be aware of the
invisible to which we are blind. We live in a world
of things which command our attention and assert
themselves: we have no need to affirm them, they are
there. Things invisible do not assert
themselves
- we have to seek them out and discover them.
The outside world demands our attention: God
entreats us diffidently. <…>
Blinded by the world of things we forget that it
does not match the depth of which man is capable.
Man is both small and great. When we think of
ourselves in an ever-expanding universe -
immeasurably big or infinitely small - we see
ourselves as a speck of dust, frail, of no account;
but when we turn inwards we discover that nothing in
this immensity is great enough to fill us to the
brim - the whole created world falls like a grain of
sand into the depth of our being: we are too vast
for it to fill or fulfil us. God alone, who has made
us for himself, on his scale, can do that. <…>
The world of things has an opacity, a density,
weight and volume, but it has no depth. We can
always penetrate to the heart of things, and when we
have reached their deepest point, it is a terminal
point, there is no way through to infinity: the
centre of a sphere is its innermost point but if we
try to go beyond that we return to the surface at
the antipodes. But Holy Scripture speaks of the
depth of the human heart. It is not a depth that can
be measured; its very nature is immensity, it goes
beyond all bounds of measurement. This depth is
rooted in the immensity of God himself. It is only
when we have understood the difference between a
presence that asserts itself and a presence we have
to seek because we sense it in our hearts, when we
have understood the difference between the heavy,
opaque density of the world around us and the human
profundity which only God can fill - and I would go
so far as to say the profundity of every created
thing whose vocation it is to become the place of
the divine presence, when, all things accomplished,
God will be all in all things - it is only then that
we can begin our search in the knowledge that we are
blind, blinded by the visible which prevents us
grasping the invisible. To be blind to the
invisible, to be aware only of the tangible world,
is to be on the outside of the fullness of
knowledge, outside the experience of total reality
which is the world in God and God at the heart of
the world. The blind man Bartimaeus was painfully
aware of this because owing to his physical
blindness, the visible world escaped him. He could
cry out to the Lord in utter despair, with all the
desperate hope he felt when salvation was passing
him by, because he felt himself cut off. The reason
why all too often we cannot call to God in this way
is that we do not realise how much we are cut off by
being blind to the total vision of the world - a
vision which could afford complete reality to the
visible world itself. If only we could learn to be
blind to the visible in order to see beyond, in
depth, the invisible, in and around us, penetrating
all things with its presence!
Blindness is manifold: it may, never with us, but
with the saints, result from having seen a light too
bright. St Symeon the New Theologian, speaking of
the Divine Darkness, says that it is excess of
light, of a light so blinding that he who has seen
it, sees no more. It may also be blindness with open
eyes. <…> We can see with the eyes of indifference
as the passers-by saw Bartimaeus. We can see with
the eyes of greed as the glutton in Dickens who,
seeing cattle grazing in the fields, could only
think 'live beef!' We can see with the eyes of
hatred when we become horribly clear-sighted but
with the perspicacity of the devil, seeing nothing
but evil, making a vile caricature of things. And
lastly, we may see with the eyes of love, with a
pure heart that can see God and his image in people;
even in those where his image is dimmed - through
layers of appearances and counter evidence, to the
true, deep secret self of man. <…>
The instant we realise we are blind and therefore
outside the Kingdom, we can occupy in relation to
the Kingdom and to God, a situation which is real -
not the imaginary one in which we constantly place
ourselves, outside in the street, picturing the
eternal abode, trying to warm our hands at the fire
burning in the hearth on the other side of the door,
endeavouring here and now to share in the life which
is still out of our reach, imagining already that
the tiny spark which shines in us is even now all
the Kingdom. It is not yet the Kingdom, it is only
an earnest pledge of life eternal, a promise, an
appeal lodged in us to make us continue in hope as
we take our stand where the Gospel tells us to begin
- before a door which is still shut to us, never
wearying of knocking at it until it opens. We must
hold ourselves before the mystery not yet penetrated
and call, cry out towards God, seeking the way until
it unfolds before us like a straight path to heaven,
in the certainty that the moment will come when God
will grant our prayer. I purposely do not say 'hear'
because we are always heard although a perceptible
response is not always given to us. God is not deaf
to our prayers but we are not always capable of
understanding God's silence in response to our cry.
If we realised we were outside a closed door, we
could measure both our human solitude and also how
far we still are from the joy to which we are
called, from the fullness which God offers us, and
we could at the same time appreciate - and this is
very important - how rich we are despite our
infinite poverty. We know so little of the things of
God, we live so little in him yet what wealth there
is for us in this spark of Presence, of knowledge,
of communion shining at the heart of the darkness
that we are! If the darkness is yet so rich in
light, if absence is so rich in presence, if life
which but dawns is such fullness, with what hope,
with what mounting joy, can we stand before this
closed door, in the happy thought that one day it
will open and we shall know an outburst of life such
as we cannot yet contain within ourselves. <…>
From “Meditation on a Theme”. |