Propel Sophia   

Seeing God through an iPod

by Margaret Philbrick

 

Sophia is the Greek word for Wisdom, and Propel Sophia seeks out the voices of truly wise women and asks them to share worked examples of how they express faith in daily life. Pull up a chair at Sophia’s table, won’t you? There’s plenty of space. Learn more here. 

 

As a writer I’m drawn to large projects that are years in the making. Yet, focused work on my current manuscript can feel limited: not all of life is contained in Renaissance Italy. For our anniversary, my husband gave me an iPod with the date of our wedding engraved on the back. This little blue baby allows me to take beautiful photographs instantly and capture the grandeur of God’s handiwork with clarity and presence. When I need a break from writing I wander the woods photographing moss.

Perhaps this might seem unproductive. Inefficient. Indulgent, even. 

We so seldom take time to rest in the world around us. When was the last time you collapsed on summer grass, plucked a single blade and pressed it between your two thumbs? Then positioned it just right, inflated your lungs and blew, hoping to shock the world with a mighty honk? This childlike endeavor requires a willingness to stop, sit and see. 


Stop, Sit, and See

These three actions may help us live a balanced life, but the Western ideal of success places no value on the virtues of stopping to take in what God may be wanting to show us. Instead, as author Anne Lamott describes it, our culture pursues “forward thrust, going forward, staying one step ahead of the abyss… and if we can’t stay ahead of the abyss then we go to IKEA and buy a throw rug.”  

We buy a throw rug to cover up the abyss because we don’t want to see it. Outrunning the abyss of a meaningless, unproductive life drives us onward. After all, in our short few decades on earth we’ve been convinced by our parents, our schools, our families and friends that we’ve got to make a difference in this world. The endless pursuit of difference-making is exhausting. Could taking time to stop, sit and see bear fruit instead? Exploring the lives of poets, artists and prophets tells us unequivocally, “yes.”

I recently led a poetic journaling event with young moms desperately in need of a night away from their kids. Instead of hanging out drinking wine and talking incessantly about their kids, they were longing for a creative and restorative activity. I used the German poet, Rainer Maria Rilke as my subject for leading these women because he knew the value of investing slow and significant time to develop a creative work. He tells us that, “to be an artist means, not to compute or count; it means to ripen as the tree which does not force its sap, but stands unshaken in the storms of spring with no fear that summer might not follow.” Oh, to have the confidence of a tree who does not count its rings. Gathering rings, rendering sap and bearing fruit takes time and God is in no hurry. To access his light we need to cease our hurry and see the small things which are often overlooked, like the single blades of grass or the ever-changing color of water.
 

Finding God in the Wilderness

On a chilly spring evening I attended a lecture at a local college on the life of artist Lilias Trotter. I’d never heard of this gifted Victorian era artist who gave up a career as the first renowned female painter in England to pursue life as a missionary in Algeria. She devoted her life to loving Muslim people, especially women and their children. Similar to the work of moms today, her work was arduous— hand washing laundry in rivers, feeding numerous children and forging friendships with women in sewing circles while learning Arabic. Her calling could easily have overwhelmed her. Yet, she chose to find daily sacred space by wandering into the desert to capture images of God in highly detailed, painted landscapes in her journal— precise images as small as a matchbook due to the scarcity of art supplies. She learned to “hold back everything that would crowd our souls” in order to access  God’s light and, in turn, give that light to others. Her commitment to separating herself from the rigors of work to see God in the wilderness inspired me to do the same. My lens of wonder in all his works needed time to focus and a deliberate attempt to “uncrowd" my soul allowed open spaces for his light to come in.

The daisies have been talking again—the reason they spread out their leaves flat on the ground is because the flowers stretch out their little hands, as it were, to keep back the blades of grass that would  shut out the sunlight. They speak so of the need of deliberately holding back everything that would crowd our souls and stifle the freedom of God’s light and air.” - Lilias Trotter, 1899 

Which brings me back to my walks in the wood, photographing moss. Some of these images called for a quick poem, a little nugget of carefully crafted words to describe what spoke to me in creation. This gift forced me to slow down and look for the beauty unfolding in front of me and then reflect on what I’d seen and take the next step, create! When we create we become more like God because we are made in the image of the author of all creation. The #poetsofinstagram community opened my eyes to another world of creatives all because of an antiquated iPod and a willingness to take time and go out looking for God in his great, green world.

As Rilke said, we don’t need to “compute or count” our followers, likes on Instagram, page views, or friends. We need to ripen as the tree and wave with the freedom of tall grass. Make time for God, look for him in the moss, listen for him in the daisies. Stop, sit and see, and if you are so inspired, give him back some of what he’s shown you.

Blonde Grass
On I-65
behind the gas station
tufting near a rusty cover
you blow blonde blades.
We happy few,
restroom key, 
stiff in hand,
sip sparkling water, 
unsuspecting,
arrested by
tousled tips,
highjacking the eye,
you provide a welcome diversion
from broken mirrors,
empty toilet paper rolls,
the waiting floor,
too wet to be water.
Your glorious waves
of limey softness,
rustle and whisper…
“It’s summer,” 
sing your supple, 
freedom song. 

 

Margaret Philbrick

You can follow Margaret’s musings at www.margaretphilbrick.com.