It's
been quite a while since I've posted here. Not because there has been nothing
worth commenting on, there most definitely has been, but because I don’t feel
that I had anything particularly worth saying that wasn’t already being said by
someone else. In writing this, I am now wondering whether that should actually
matter. Sincerity is surely better than originality. I’m side-tracking myself
before I’ve even got started, but it’s possibly something worth considering in
a later post.
ANYWAY.
I don’t feel like I’ve been doing very well lately, Christianity-wise. Worse, I
don’t think that I’ve been trying especially hard. One has dry patches during
which religious feeling seems hard to come by, and although I’ve at no point
during this period questioned the philosophical or intellectual basis of my
faith, I have not been doing very much to live it. They happen, and they do pass.
My
parents are both very keen and very talented gardeners. My father has had an
allotment for as long as I’ve been alive, and now he’s retired he grows
fuchsias for competition. My mother had always grown flowers. Wherever we’ve
lived we’ve had beautiful, productive, well-ordered gardens. I strongly suspect
that it is a constant source of mild disappointment to both of them that I have
never shown the slightest interest or aptitude towards gardening.
For
me, Christianity is an awful lot like gardening. I love the idea of it, but the
reality just seems far too much like hard work. I love the results, but at the moment the
thing itself seems like far too much effort for far too little immediate result.
The conception of it is wonderful, the purpose and the logic of it sound, but I
am simply not the person to live my faith with the intensity and the outright
dedication with which it ought to be lived.
Fear
not, dear reader. This is not my recantation. Rather, it is the admission of a weakness. We are told that the first step to solving a problem is to admit to it
being one. I’ve written before about my concerns that my faith is too
intellectual. Now I wonder whether it isn’t too lazy. I read about the great
preachers and missionaries of times gone by, the Wesleys, Booths, Spurgeons and
so on, and all I can do is envy them the burning, obsessive driving faith that
seems to sustain them from early rising to late bed. I don’t have that.
There
are those who’ve had a sudden, transformative Damascene Road moment that has
filled them with faith. I have not. I’ve come to my religion more slowly, more
cautiously, piecemeal. I like to think that as a result it is rather deeper,
firmer faith than the quickly gained and quickly lost fervour of the sudden
convert, but perhaps I’m fooling myself. If it’s burnt longer and more steadily then it certainly
burns cooler, and mostly under the surface.
If
this whole post sounds like a self-indulgent and self-pitying moan, then I
apologise, but it’s really not what I intend. Rather it’s an honest appraisal,
an acknowledgement that there is plenty of room for improvement. More, it is an
acknowledgement that improvement is possible. There is power in such things, I
think. Perhaps, like the first Methodists, I simply need to be more organised
and methodical in my faith. I need to make sure that I spend time on it more
often and more regularly.
I
said earlier that these dry patches happen. They do. Even the Pope and Archbishop
Welby admit that they have periods, sometimes even extended periods during
which they find their faith a struggle. The trick is in not mistaking them for
an endless drought but recognising them as a mere temporary lull. They also
tell you that perhaps something needs changing; in yourself, in your life,
perhaps both. Christianity, like gardening, is not all flat lawns and beautiful
flowers; it is also occasionally drought and drudgery and backache.
So
then, I’ll keep on keeping on. I'll carry on trying to try. I’ll pray for help. I’ll pray for rain. My
garden might be poorly kept and poorly mowed, with too many weeds and too few
flowers, but I can see what it ought to look like and I’ve got the tools. It’s
just a question of forcing myself to pick them up and do the work.