Showing posts with label Darkness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Darkness. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

What Turns Up (The New Pornographers)

image courtesy aphotoshooter (Flikr)

"What's love, 
what's love, 
what's love,
but what turns up in the dark?"

In these days closing in on the winter solstice, what I want to do is grow meditative with the darkness, but I often catch myself just resenting the long nights, like I'm racing to complete as much as possible before the last blue seeps from the sky.

Fact is, everything about how I live (cell phone, work schedule, holiday list) resists a meaningful way to move in harmony with the rhythms of light and dark, life and death, at this time of year. I know this, and yet I can't always stop myself. My cultural training is to think of the darkness as ending, as loss, as emptiness. After all, when people say, "she's carrying a lot of darkness in her" they usually don't mean that as a good thing.

"Up in the Dark" feels like a song about this sort of negative darkness: secrets and hiding. Fear and deception. And yet in the midst of all these "dark" emotions, love shows up. Not what I expected from an Indie pop song. 'Desire,' maybe, 'hopelessness,' possibly, but in fact, the refrain suggests that love, by definition, is 'what turns up in the dark'. 

First question: When has Love shown up for you "in the dark?"


Up in the Dark from The New Pornographers on Myspace.

Yet as much as the prevailing culture around me has taught me to understand darkness in only one way, I have also learned that darkness is where the roots grow. Even during this dark season, as the plants and trees sleep, a greening energy is moving deep within the heart of things. Life is stripped to its core so that it may return renewed. Darkness deepens life.

"What turns up in the dark?
What turns up in the dark?"

Second question: When have you discovered Love waiting for you in the shelter of darkness?

Could it be true that not only does Love not abandon us to the darkness, 
but a sheltering and peaceful darkness is what can help Love grow strongest? Could it be true that befriending the darkness, where it doesn't threaten to engulf us, could be a way to understand our belovedness more fully, to understand God as our Ground-of-All-Being more totally? Could it be true that in the dark all the exhausting running and hiding and games can end, the veil can be dropped, and we can encounter our vulnerability and truth within community and with God?

You who live in the shelter of the Most High,
    who abide in the shadow of the Almighty,
will say to the Lord, “My refuge and my fortress;
    my God, in whom I trust.” 
- Psalm 91: 1-2



So as we dwell in the shadows of some of the darkest days of the year, may we hold the paradox of this space well: the possibility and the difficulty, the life and the death. May we remember that in this solstice darkness we are invited to die to old ways of clinging and lying, hiding and fearing, while also inviting our deepest wholeness and renewal in that very same darkness. May we remember that Christ dwells in this Advent space, in this almost-Christmas space, ready to be born in darkness, ready to be encountered in darkness, ready to be fully revealed in light.

All we need is this time in the dark.



Shine on.

                                                                                    -- Anna

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Reclaiming the Dark (Hem)

 
 
If I said, “The darkness will definitely hide me; the light will become night around me,” even then the darkness isn’t too dark for you Nighttime would shine bright as day, because darkness is the same as light to you!  -Psalm 139:10-11


    

      All my favorite moments of this season happen at night: candlelight services, watching from my window, long after midnight, when the only movement on the street is falling snow; but most of all I love to sit with all the lights in the house off, except for the Christmas tree. There is something about the stillness and the quiet, but more than that, there is something about the simplicity, the sensory deprivation, that is restorative after running from place to place to place, with flashing lights and blaring musak.

     And yet in this season we have so many images focused on light. Some of the ones I hear (and use) most frequently are ‘the gathering dawn,’ the light of Love,’ ‘Shining Hope.’ Even the Bible images this season around light: “The true light that shines on all people was coming into the world.” But let’s not move too quickly past the darkness, also rich with meaning.  There is something about this season of darkness before the light, something that invites the hush of our voices, the slowing of our steps, drawing us into listening and observing, helping us move towards the mystery of it all.
     I grew up in a space where the darkness of night was a welcome experience: stars were visible, the night sky was not saturated by the strange shades of light pollution that color the night sky of my urban home now, and most importantly, I was safe in the night. For some darkness brings with it terror or anguish, I know. I do not claim darkness as an unequivical good, only as a space where God is, in the ambiguity of all that is encompassed in the darkness. So we seek God in the darkness and in the light, we listen for the whispers of Divine Love in our darkness and we listen for Her shouts as the darkness gives birth to light.
 
 
Eveningland by Hem 
 
 
     Today’s song is called Eveningland. It has no lyrics, but for me the music evokes a falling darkness full of beauty and mystery. Darkness like the cool protection of a deep cave, or like the formative nurture of a womb, darkness that hugs us close on quite nights, darkness that shades unseen mysteries for just a little longer, darkness in which our dreams ripen to sweetness.  May we seek this kind of darkness, rich with peace and rest, growth and preparation for what is yet to be born.

I believe that Christ came not to dispel the darkness but to teach us to dwell with integrity, compassion and love in the midst of ambiguity.  The one who grew in the fertile darkness of Mary’s womb knew that darkness is not evil of itself. Rather it can become the tending place in which our longings for healing, justice and peace grow and come to birth.”  -Jan Richardson

For those who dread the dark we lift a prayer of protection and peace. For those who long for restoration and stillness, lead us, we pray, into the shadows of safety and spaces of preparation from which we may be reborn.
 
-Lindsey
 
 
 
 
**This week, we'll take YOUR suggestions for what songs help you Seed the Hope or Resist the Sleep. Post a YouTube link with your thoughts and we'll re-post them all on our Saturday post.**