Monday, August 24, 2015

Hearing Voices




I was sitting on the porch reading with my wife the other day and she made the comment, “Every time I read 1 Samuel 1-3 I hear Jill Briscoe’s voice.”  Jill Briscoe is a Bible teacher whose memorable teaching on Samuel has stuck with my wife for literally, decades.

Her statement reminded me of my own experience of “hearing voices” and set me to thinking…

Some 15 or so years ago I was introduced to Between the Dreaming and the Come True, and Living Prayer, a couple of books by Robert Benson.  Several of my friends including the Mars Hill Dinner Club (This dinner club is story in itself.) were reading the books and found them to be intriguing if somewhat outside our box in terms of how he described prayer. 

At the end of Living Prayer the bio noted that Robert Benson does prayer retreats and gave his contact information, an address.  Not believing for a moment that an actual author would ever reply to a letter, I wrote Robert asking if he would do a weekend retreat for some friends and me.  Some time passed, (See, I knew a real author would not have time for the likes of us…) and I was surprised to receive a hand written letter from Robert saying he did indeed do retreats and he would be glad to lead one for us, preferably at St. Mary’s retreat center in Sewanee, Tn.

To make a long story short, the retreat with Robert was life changing for each of the 12 guys who attended that retreat.  I dare say none of us has approached prayer since in the same way we did prior to that weekend.  One of the “different” things that Robert did as he led us was to read segments from his books to us.  His reading and teaching became ingrained in my mind such that I cannot read a Robert Benson book, I have read 15+ to date, without heard his voice “reading” it to me.  I hear the familiar tone, the soft voice, the pauses for emphasis, the strong breath through his nostrils, and his characteristic inflections.  Robert’s books are always heard in Roberts’s voice.

That retreat became the first of many and spawned lunches in Nashville, or halfway between, and initiated a personal friendship that has endured these 15+ years.  Somewhere in that span, Robert wrote a book about the brokenness of the church (The Body Broken) using as an illustration of the Body coming together as one, a lunch shared between Robert and a rag tag contingent of us from Knoxville at the old Union Station.  We were not named, but there was no missing his description of each of us.  I must say there is something special that happens to a relationship when the author writes you into his story.

This experience of reading words written by an author, to hearing his voice read the words, followed by my own reading of his words and hearing his voice, and now having a portion of my story written and read into the authors story seem a wonderful metaphor for the life of one who is following Christ.  Someone “recommends” or even reads His words to us and we are drawn to what is being read.  This drawing leads to a personal encounter and hearing of the words said, after which in our own reading the words are heard in the voice of the One who spoke us into being.  And yes, the wonder then of experiencing the joy of being written into the author’s story as we follow him.

Namaste*


*This is the closing in all of Robert’s letters.

If you would like to know about Robert Benson here is a link to his web page.
http://www.robertbensonwriter.com