Close to the Father’s Heart
a sermon based on John 1:1-18
by Rev. Randy Quinn
Yohann Anderson is a musician I met several years ago
at a worship workshop. He was trying to help churches create
contemporary worship services, and since we had one at our church, we
thought he might have some good ideas for us.
There were several things he shared with us that we were already doing –
and lots of other things that I no longer remember. But what I do
remember was some of his theory about congregational singing. I think I
remember it because it was so different than what I had been taught and
because it also made so much sense to me.
Yohann began by telling us how a tuning fork works. You tap on the tines
of the fork, and they begin to vibrate. (I found one and will
demonstrate.) The size of the tines determines how fast they vibrate,
but what actually happens is that the air around them begins to pulsate
at the same speed. That pulsating resonates with our ear drums and our
brains interpret it as a sound.
Lots of things work the same way – sometimes at pitches so high and so
low that we cannot hear them. It’s why the philosopher-scientists asked
the theoretical question of whether or not a tree falling in the woods
makes a sound if there is no one there to hear it. The sound itself is
only pulsating air. Without an ear to interpret the pulses, there is no
evidence of a sound.
A piano tuner uses a tuning fork to tune the strings in a piano. He or
she tightens or loosens the strings until they vibrate at the same speed
as the tuning fork.
That much I knew. And many of you do, too.
After telling us that, Yohann did something else that I’ve seen done
before. First he tapped the tines of a tuning fork, then he set it down
on a table and the table began to vibrate at the same pitch. It became
like an amplifier making the sound more easily heard throughout the
room. (Again, I demonstrate.)
What he said next, however, still resonates within me – if you don’t
mind the pun. That table is not a musical instrument. But it began to
sing. For those who have come to believe they can’t sing or who have
actually been told they can’t sing, Yohann says the truth is that like
the table every one of us sings when we are in the presence of music.
Our bodies begin vibrating with the music – just like the table did.
And in particular, our vocal cords begin to vibrate at the same pitch
that we hear. The pulsating air not only “tickles” our ear drums, it
causes our vocal cords to vibrate, too. Singing is simply letting air go
over those vocal cords to produce musical chords.
Yohann said that some people don’t sing because they are afraid of
singing the wrong note rather than letting their vocal cords give voice
to the music that they are already creating. They may not know how to
control their vocal cords yet, but they know how to sing – it’s how God
created us!
He went on to suggest that the best way to get people to sing out loud
is to use words without music so there are no wrong notes. (In our
traditional worship service, we assume people can read music and know
how to control their vocal cords to create music. At our Café Chapel, we
allow people to resonate with the music before putting voice to the
sound already being created by their vocal cords.)
Not everyone agrees with his theory. But you don’t have to agree with
his conclusions to recognize an important truth.
If a tuning fork can make a table sing by getting close enough to it,
then certainly the light of God can be reflected in our lives when we
allow ourselves to get close enough to God.
Several years ago, on a trip to Kansas in fact, I began reading the
works of Robert Fulghum aloud. I found myself laughing at what I was
reading, so I would read it to Ronda. We read through an entire book on
that trip. I have four of his books, but one I turn to regularly when I
meet with couples to talk about weddings. I read a delightfully funny
story about a wedding gone awry and a marriage that lasted.
Deep within that same book is another story I’d like to read for you now
– though in the interest of time I think I’ll begin near the end of this
particular story rather than from the beginning of it.
Robert Fulghum begins the story rambling about a trip he made to Greece.
On that trip he met Alexander Papaderos, a doctor of Philosophy, who
worked for many years trying to bring peace between the bitterly divided
countries of Europe after World War II. Near the end of this story,
Fulghum tells how he asked professor Papaderos why he does what he does.
Papaderos explained his motivation for doing so by telling a story from
his childhood .
"When I was a small child," he said, "during the war we were poor and
lived in a remote village. One day, on the road, I found the broken
pieces of a mirror. A German motorcycle had been wrecked in that place.
"I tried to find all the pieces and put them together, but it was
impossible, so I kept only the largest piece . . . By scratching it on a
stone, I made it round. I began to play with it as a toy and became
fascinated by the fact that I could reflect light into dark places where
the sun would never shine – in deep holes and crevices and dark closets.
It became a game for me to get light into the most inaccessible places I
could find.
“I kept the little mirror, and as I went about my growing up, I would
take it out at idle moments and continue the challenge of the game. As I
became a man, I grew to understand that this was a metaphor for what I
might do with my life. I came to understand that I am not the light or
the source of the light. The light – truth, understanding, knowledge –
is there, and it will only shine in many dark places if I reflect it.
"I am a fragment of a mirror whose whole design and shape I do not know.
Nevertheless, with what I have, I can reflect light into the dark places
of the world – into the black places in the hearts of men – and change
some things in people. Perhaps others may see and do likewise.”
Fulghum then tells how professor Papaderos took the same mirror and
caught the sun’s light and turned it toward Fulghum’s face and then onto
his hands.
If you followed along while I read the scripture this morning, you may
have noticed that I skipped a few verses. As I’ve studied this passage
from John’s gospel, I’ve come to appreciate the sheer beauty of it as
well as the profundity of it.
But the poetic beauty, it seems to me, is detracted by the verses I left
out. I left out what appear to be parenthetical comments about John the
Baptist so that you could hear the entire poem.
Here’s what I left out. (Read John 1:6-9, 15).
Why John inserted them into these majestic lines baffles me. And the
only conclusion I have come to is that the followers of John the Baptist
must have originally used this poem to speak about John. He was so close
to God that they thought this was an “ode to John.” The gospel writer is
trying to refute their claim as he points them toward the true Word of
God who is Jesus.
As I remembered the story of professor Papaderos, I suddenly realized
that the goal is to be so effective at reflecting God’s light that
people see God in us – much as the followers of John the Baptist had
apparently seen in his life.
For that to happen, we must find a way to be close to the Father’s
heart. We must find ways to “resonate” with God’s love. We must find
ways to see the world through God’s eyes so that the world will see
God’s eyes in us.
There is a song written by Gary Chapman that has been a favorite of mine
since I first heard Amy Grant sing it while I was in college. In the
chorus, he says:
When people look inside my life, I want to hear them say:
She’s got her Father’s eyes, her Father’s eyes
Eyes that find the good in things when good is not around,
Eyes that find the source of help when help just can’t be found.
Eyes full of compassion, seeing ev’ry pain,
Knowin’ what you’re goin’ through and feelin’ it the same,
Just like my Father’s eyes .
My hope is that in this new year, people will look at each of us and see
God’s eyes. My prayer is that people will look at our church and
experience the love of God.
That can only happen if we will tune our hearts to the heart of God.
(I tap the tuning fork again and set it on a table.) Amen.