30 June 2016
18 June 2016
Simple and Elemental
‘I like you.’
In the middle of a busy day,
surrounded by children and all their accompanying noise, a three year old boy
said these words to me and it made me stop in my tracks.
I mean, how often does anyone say
that to you?
What can you do but smile? It’s so
disarming.
His simple, transparent honesty
was incredibly endearing. A heart-warming moment that could easily have been
missed. Isn’t it far too easy to get caught up with organising and cleaning and
disciplining and teaching little people? The frustrations, the push-your-button
moments, and the unbelievable mess they are capable of making in an
unbelievably short space of time, driving you to the brink of sanity and
then…………….
‘I like you.’
And suddenly all that other maddening
stuff, just melts away.
It’s not something we big people
say. It’s not something we do. We don’t
retain the straightforward relational simplicity of childhood. Conversations
take a sharp turn into awkward, self-conscious territory. We shift
uncomfortably and don’t quite know how to respond.
Jesus said, ‘Whoever becomes simple and elemental again,
like this child, will rank high in God’s kingdom.’ (Matthew 18:3 Msg)
He said it to the
disciples who are asking about rank order in God’s Kingdom. Messy competitiveness,
jealousy, a jostling for position, fraying of friendships and fracturing
relationships. Anything but simple!
Jesus answers by
calling a child over to stand amongst them and tells them all to go back to
square one.
As that small
child stood, perhaps shyly, in the midst of all those adults, what did he or
she see in their faces when those words were spoken?
Puzzlement?
Incomprehension? Shame?
The flat ground
in square one puts everyone on the level.
The only person
who can and does stand above us, taking the highest honour in God’s kingdom, is
the only person who knows best how to live with a child’s fresh, simplicity of
heart. It is anything but a slight thing, when he loves us.
It is the most
profoundly moving and life transformative moment when we stop and actually listen
to him telling us,
‘I like you’
‘I made you, you
are mine’
‘You are
precious to me.’
‘You are my
child.’
‘I love you’.
We are disarmed.
Become.
So there we
stood. One big person. One little person. Thirty eight years my junior and he
was doing a much better job of being present in the moment, speaking simply and
honestly. A disciple being
pulled up short and humbled. Back to square one it is.
I imagine the
conversation changed as the disciples all moved off. When we hear Jesus say words
like that to us, how does the process of becoming begin?
Do we become
more able to face each other and speak with sincerity without the need to
dissemble?
Do we become more
able to turn to the person beside us and speak words of love, encouragement and
affection?
Do we experience
moments of true personal connection because we are deeply and personally connected
to Jesus?
The letters of
the New Testament give evidence that yes we do. Those first disciples
experienced and went through the process of becoming simple and elemental
again. They rank high in the kingdom of God.
Children looking
up at the face of Jesus.