Sunday, May 27, 2018

Kind Of An Odd Question To Ask

I believe that I’m not unlike most folks, my age, who have spent a great deal of life asking questions. In retrospect, it seems that more than a few of my plaguing inquires were probably the wrong inquiries. In fact, more than a few of my questions were probably even unanswerable. But it took me a while to be able to admit there existed such distinctions. When was a child and inquiry was my way of gaining a handle on the world around me, I was convinced that every question was right to ask, and every inquiry deserved an answer that satisfied. I suppose there is still some truth to that comforting thought; because questions are valid and answers should satisfy, I think. But later, as social pressure began to stress conformity and asking questions carried the risk of embarrassment, I learned to repress my inquisitiveness. Not so much, any more.  Once in a while, I’ll get that evil eye from Bettyann when I begin to ask 'none of my business' questions of someone. On other occasions, I get the sense that a person is a bit astonished; indicated by a stammering and surprised stare. What is it that I see as value in my inquiring mind that offers the ready assurance of 'there are no wrong questions!' I don’t believe it means that I cannot ask an unanswerable question or inquire in such a way that simply fails to cohere with reality. Almost daily, I ask Bettyann, "Why do you say my pants and shirt do not match? I'm still seeking the answer of the other day, sitting on the ATV, looking at the voluminous clouds rolling in, as I asked how much time is in the sky? I can only imagine a great number of the questions I ask along the way are in fact quite similar. 

Now, when it comes to faith, I am actually instructed in my Christian faith to carry into my discipleship some of the qualities I held as a child. I wonder, is today's child's passion for inquiry one of the traits Jesus intended in His directive: "I tell you the truth, unless you change and become like little children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven?" Is my expectation of every inquiry capable of being answered to my seventy-four old satisfaction or even answered at all, a quality He is encouraging me to keep? 
Regardless, Jesus readily received the questions of those around Him, whether they were asked with ulterior motive or childlike abandon; no inquiry was turned away. Of course, this is not to say that He always answered, or that He always satisfied the questioner. Actually, more often than not, He replied with a question of His own. "Who gave you the authority to do what you are doing?" the scribes asked. Jesus replied, "I will ask you one question; answer me and I will answer you. Did the baptism of John come from heaven or human origin?" Knowing they were stuck between conceding to Jesus's authority and risking the wrath of the crowd, they refused to answer. So Jesus refused as well.
Hopefully, beyond learning that questions, like words, can be used as ammunition, I have also learned as I’ve grown from an inquiring child to a questioning elder that questions are not deserving of satisfactory answers simply because they are asked. I have to admit that there are some questions that simply can't be satisfied. And yet, at times of late I scarcely take this wisdom with me into the realms of faith and belief. Standing before You, Father, Whose wisdom is said to be many-sided, I somehow and sometimes feel that You can and must answer my every inquiry. But I’m finding that questioning The all-knowing does not presuppose that the question itself was even rational. In fact, I see where Jesus's reactions to the questions around Him seem to verify the strong possibility that many of my questions miss the point entirely.
So what does it mean if many of my great questions of where do I go from here, or ultimate reality and theological inquiry are as unanswerable as my childhood wanting to know; if Jesus lives in my heart how can He live in my teacher’s heart? First, I’ve learned the question isn't wrong in the sense that it has no meaning for me. Nor does a question's unanswerability mean I must walk away from the inquiry entirely disheartened. On the contrary, even in questions that cannot be answered there rings the promise of an Answerer who satisfies. "No eye has seen, no ear has heard, no mind has conceived, what God has prepared for those who love him." Jesus may not have a physical address, but His dwelling is nearer and greater than I could possibly ever imagine.
Aw! The flashback comes of me riding with my grandfather in the '34' Ford sedan across the Ft. Steel Bridge, crossing the North Platte river, when I was six or seven or eight.  It was the desire to know; the curiosity that formed the question, and the assumption that my grandfather, who knew everything, indeed held the answer; was a phenomenal force that compelled me to ask in the first place. It is this compulsion to know that Jesus encouraged in every questioner, however He chose to answer them. Perhaps He knew that in becoming like a child who longs to see, I would be moved further up and farther in to the kingdom and closer to the One who prepares me for it. Inquiry is not in opposition to faith; it is faith's road to the answerer.
Father, God, thank You for bring to my attention that one of the first questions the disciples asked Jesus was, "Where do you live?" He simply answered, "Come and see."  Amen

No comments: