“Slow down, you
move too fast. You’ve got to make the morning last, just kicking down the
cobble stone. Looking for fun and feeling groovy.” This song, one of my favorite Simon &
Garfunkle songs, popped into my head this morning.
My life has
certainly slowed down, as far as activity.
But my mind goes into hyper mode more than I would like it to,
especially when I read. A friend lent me
a little book she thought I would like to read.
She told me she used it as a morning devotional this winter, reading one
meditation per day. I picked it up this
morning and loved the first meditation and “Bang”…I am off to races and out of
the starting gate. I was on my way to
devouring this book in one sitting…but then I stopped. I have been intentionally trying to savor
what I read, rather that devour it, reading from the beginning to the end in
one sitting. I justify myself by saying
this is an overview reading and I will reread it slowly the second time; there
is rarely a second time.
This reminded me
of a conversation I had with a friend one time.
We had discovered than M&Ms were our favorite candy. She told me she had disciplined herself to
buy an individual pack of M&Ms and eat one M&M per hour. That way the bag lasted the whole day. I remember looking at her like she was
nuts. I never put less than five
M&Ms in my mouth at a time and the bag is devoured in 15 minutes or less. Sweet but short was my experience; luscious
and lasting was her experience. I tried
her way and found it lovely to extend that experience out over time. I can’t say I always do that, but I do try
because I know the benefits.
This is the same
idea behind using lectio divina as a spiritual reading practice…luscious and
lasting, as those words go down into my soul and give me delight in my
soul. I have intentionally been using
this practice for many years in my morning devotional time; but sometimes I
forget to use it in the rest of my reading, or in my studying. I constantly have to remind my self to slow
down and be patient in all that I do. It
makes me grateful that the Christian life I have chosen is a Way of Practice
and not a demonstration of perfection.
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