Do you cry? Why? What makes your eyes water? What makes your sight blur, your heart ache,
your soul weep?
Do you weep?
This is a big question for me… for the very simple reason that
I, Kelsey Davies, avoid crying at all times.
I take pride in the fact that sad movies do not move me. I stand tall in circumstances that might make
others fall to their knees. I practice
daily my poker face skills and my ability to compartmentalize anguish and
sorrow. Tears do not become me.
Or so I tell myself.
Recently, I’ve come to the understanding that I’ve been
lying to myself all this time. My lies
have made me strong, yes, in moments of adversity and hardship. But I’ve realized that tears are
beautiful. They’re little glistening
reminders of feelings, little droplets of empathy, little water warriors against
the great foe Apathy. Tears remind me
that I am human, that I am broken, that the world
is broken.
I have had two quotes float through my mind quite a lot this
week, words stated so simply and profoundly that I just can’t quite shake
them. The first comes from Jonathan
Safran Foer’s book Extremely Loud and
Incredibly Close: “Sometimes I can feel my bones straining under the weight
of all the lives I’m not living”. The
second comes from Josh Garrels’ song “Farther Along”: “The good man died, the
bad man thrives and Jesus cries because he loves them both”.
I can’t quite put words to how these two quotes make me
feel. Sad doesn’t quite capture the
profoundness of it; heavy doesn’t quite capture the weight of it; depressed
doesn’t quite capture the energy of it.
The simple explanation for this? It’s not just me feeling this way. There is something deeper in my gut that
understands this inward groaning of my soul and feels it too. As Rubem Alves puts it: “If we are to believe
Paul, the Holy Spirit abides in depths too deep for words.” The Holy Spirit dwells deep inside me,
hovering over the waters of my soul. She
understands my feelings that no words can express because those feelings are
her feelings too. Roman 8:26: “In the
same way, the Spirit helps us in our weakness. We do not know what we ought to
pray for, but the Spirit himself intercedes for us through wordless groans” (emphasis mine). Groan: a moan so full of feeling and meaning that
no word can fully describe it. The
Spirit groans! God recognizes that some feelings are too
profound for conventional dialogue. And
the truth of the matter is: even Jesus wept.
That means that the Holy Trinity—our Lord, Life and Love—feels the pain of the world, understands the groaning of our
unsatisfied hearts, and cries because of it.
Sometimes, crying is the only way to express those deep
feelings, those wordless groans, those aches of yearning for wholeness. And
when we cry, we are not alone. Thank the
Lord, we are not alone.
So today, cry a little.
Embrace that pain and yearning that are buried deep. Open those doors to your heart and feel.
Stay tuned!
Photo Credit: http://lookafteryoureyes.org/how-your-eyes-work/about-your-eyes/tears/
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