For Christmas this past year, my wife gave me a
“squirrel-proof hanger for my bird feeders.” It’s deluxe! In fact, it is so
nice that I decided I had to buy new feeders to use, the old ones looked too
tired and worn. It really works – squirrels are yet to find a way to the
feeders.
Since late December when I installed it and filled the new
feeders with really good bird seed, I have seen all sorts of birds. I’m writing
this is mid-August and I am still putting seed in the feeders and seeing an
impressive gathering of God’s original orchestra and choir: birds!
I can step out of the garage onto the drive way and quietly
stand and watch. There is a kind of rhythm to their eating that is impressive.
Certain birds prefer certain feeders. The murder of crows (yes, a “flock of
crows” is a “murder of crows.”) are too big for the feeders so they are around
the feeder on the ground eating what the smaller birds scatter as they eat. Two
different species of Woodpeckers have visited us during the summer.
If you go out just before sunrise, the music is amazing. Little wonder Psalm 19 begins with “the
heavens are recounting God’s splendor, . . .day by day it points out speech.”
Another early morning practice for me is Scripture reading.
I am striving to be very disciplined about this. If Scripture really is what
God says it is, then there is no reason I should ignore it. The more I pay
attention to creation and Scripture, the more convinced I am that I should be
doing at least some reading outside – in creation. When I do that, I am hearing
the heavens (creation, even birds!) declare God’s glory as I read His Word,
which this same Psalm (19) says “The Lord’s instruction has integrity, bringing
life back . . . is trustworthy, making the naïve smart.”
I love that phrase “bringing life back.” That sounds like a
worthwhile kind of reboot. What I have finally learned is that when I pay
attention to the world God made and take time to engage His word that the
Spirit gave – that can “bring life back.” It is the kind of daily reboot that
makes life worthy living and allows us to experience a kind of significance
that beats achievement any day of the week.
Not surprisingly, Psalm 19 ends with “May the sayings of my
mouth be acceptable to you, and the murmur of my mind before you, Yahweh, my
crag and my restorer.” That is from The
First Testament a new translation of the Old Testament I’ve read through
this summer. In more familiar terms, “Let the words of my mouth and the
meditations of my heart be acceptable to you, O Lord, our strength and
redeemer.”
What if the reboot moments in our lives at Point this year
brought us to next May where our every word and every thought honored God?
Best
of any song
is
bird song
in
the quiet, but first
you
must have the quiet.
Wendell
Berry