Two Thousand »

Edging into Mystery

I finished my book on the last Saturday of December and sent it off to my editor. He and I talked this past Saturday, and let’s just say I am over the moon: he loved it. It needs work, but he could see past its flaws to the book I was trying to write, and he’s confident he can help me turn the book in his hands into the book in my mind, so that I can put that book into his—and, I hope, your—hands.

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To celebrate the end of the macro-writing stage (and simply because I am pretty dang depleted; I need to refill my near-empty word-well), I am taking a short hiatus from blogging. I’ll be back on the 25th with a new post on blessing the water. In the interim, I’m running a few of my older posts, not the most popular ones, but ones that I love nonetheless.

Today’s post, which I wrote a year ago, articulates the past four months of my writing life: reliving a year of my life in writing was a form of prayer, a way to see anew (and also for the first time) how God was present in the midst of my days. The writing itself was a form of prayer, an exercise in seeing and believing and giving thanks all over again. I hope you, too, find ways to pray that are uniquely yours.

See you in ten days!

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This year I want to pray more often, more deeply, more intentionally.

As I’ve pondered what this might look like, Eugene Peterson pointed me in a surprising direction. In a different book than the one I quoted last time, he writes of his journey as a writer, of what he calls “heuristic writing:”

It was a way of writing that involved a good deal of listening, looking around, getting acquainted with the neighborhood. Not writing what I knew but writing into what I didn’t know, edging into a mystery…

Writing as a way of entering into language and letting language enter into me, words connecting with words and creating what had previously been inarticulate or unnoticed or hidden.

Writing as a way of paying attention.

Writing as an act of prayer.

Yes and yes and yes.

I’ve long known that I write myself back to faith when doubt or fear assails me and that part of the reason I write is to hold on to the moments of my life, so they won’t slip away so quickly. I’d never thought of these things as prayer. Now I’m beginning to.

And I’m beginning to see, too, that even when I’m not writing with pen and paper or pixels on a screen, I am writing in my mind, capturing the present moment for a little longer when I hold it with gratitude or acceptance or pleas for mercy. Or all three simultaneously.

Sometimes, I can even move beyond the writing in my mind, the trying to capture in words the sights and sounds and smells and emotions of the moment, and I can simply be in it—me, here, now.

This, too, is prayer. It is prayer that prays itself, without consciousness and without self-consciousness. Perhaps it is the best kind of prayer, because it is prayer not just with my heart or my mouth or my mind, but with my whole self because I am wholly here, wholly alive, wholly now.

Or is that holy?

—a repost from the archives

  • HisFireFly

    drinking this in, fresh breath, being prayer, yes.

  • http://kimberleeconwayireton.net/ Kimberlee Conway Ireton

    Thanks for stopping by. Thanks for leaving this comment–I’m so grateful it touched you, and that you took a moment to let me know.

  • http://sandraheskaking.com/ Sandra Heska King

    Yes, yes, and yes!

    Enjoy your break.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1442513172 Dave Vander Laan

    I love what I catch a glimpse of: Pushing through, making discoveries – and discovering unexpected but very satisfying things.

    So grateful the Spirit gives you words to articulate this, Kimberlee.

    Thank you for sharing, revealing and implicating how God is at work.