A 24-carat world
CINDY TRANE CHRISTESON
“If you have never heard the mountains singing, or seen the trees of
the field clapping their hands, do not think because of that that
they don’t. Ask God to open your ears so you may hear it, and your
eyes so you may see it, because, though few men ever know it, they
do, my friend, they do.”
-- MCCANDLISH PHILLIPS
“Stop, look, listen” was a common phrase in my childhood. If I
recall correctly, it is what we were to do before crossing the
street.
We stopped to look both ways and listen for cars before proceeding
on our way. I thought about that phrase recently when I watched some
children stop before crossing the street on their way to school. They
were laughing and giggling one minute, but they stopped and were all
very careful to check the streets in both directions when it was time
to cross. As I continued my walk, I realized that those three verbs
are also good advice when it comes to looking and listening for God
at work around us.
I thought back to a conversation I had with my friend Marcia.
She’d been on a walk one crisp morning, and we talked on the phone
about what she’d seen. She’d walked where she could see the sun
glittering on the glassy ocean. “Cindy, you should have seen it,” she
said. “I’m almost breathless just thinking about it. The ocean was
sparkling, as if God threw diamonds on the water. Cindy, it was like
diamonds in every direction.”
Early the next day, I walked up a big hill and thanked God for the
beauty of the day. I also tried to look and listen for God’s creative
touch. The more I listened, the less I heard lawnmowers and leaf
blowers. Soon, I didn’t even hear my own thoughts, which had been so
loud in my mind not long before. Instead, I heard many different
birds singing their greetings to one another and to the new day.
I looked around, and the trees seemed to dance in the breeze. I
looked longer, and some of the leaves twinkled like diamonds. Then I
headed for a long patch of green grass, which glistened with early
morning dew. Again, it looked liked diamonds sparkling among the
blades of grass.
I stopped, looked and listened for God on a recent ski trip. The
sky was blue beyond description, and I couldn’t help but stare at the
beauty of the glistening white snow. It looked like diamond dust had
frosted the snow in every direction. Even the elegant mountains
seemed to sing about God’s majesty. One cold night, we walked home
from dinner, and the sky was alive with bright, twinkling stars. It
felt like we could practically reach up and touch the Big Dipper. The
other stars glittered like diamond windows into heaven.
I stand in awe of the beauty of God’s creation, beauty that is
beyond human description. I thank God that we can ask him to give us
ears to hear the mountains sing, and eyes to see the trees of the
fields clap their hands.
And you can quote me on that.
* CINDY TRANE CHRISTESON is a Newport Beach resident who speaks
frequently to parenting groups. She may be reached via e-mail at
cindy@onthegrow.com or through the mail at 537 Newport Center Drive,
Suite 505, Newport Beach, CA 92660.
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