I kind of feel like I should be screaming in joy and wonder right now. Like I should just scream out “I CAN’T BELIEVE I’M DOING THIS! THIS IS AMAZING! THIS IS AWESOME! CAN YOU BELIEVE THIS?!”Just a few short hours ago I was in my home town of Toronto, on the shores of Lake Ontario. And now I am 1,000 miles to the south, rapidly approaching the Gulf of Mexico. Just moments ago I was sitting on the ground, firmly planted on terra firma. And now I’m several miles in the air. Ten minutes ago we were sitting still; now the aircraft I am traveling in is moving so fast that if I were to stick my head out the window and scream (not something I plan to do) my voice would be traveling only slightly faster than the plane. It’s incredible. If I weren’t here experiencing it now, I might be tempted not to believe that it was possible.
And yet I’m rather blase about the whole thing. I’ve done it before so many times. Already this is my second flight of the day. For the first flight I boarded the plane, quickly noted that the person seated beside me had his iPod fixed firmly in his ears and seemed to be in no mood for conversation, so promptly opened a book on the Resolutions of Jonathan Edwards. That took me part of the way to Atlanta, perhaps until I was over Pennsylvania or Virginia; when that book was finished I packed it away and continued to read a biography of John Bunyan, picking up with his writing of Pilgrim’s Progress. By the time we landed I was reading about The Holy War and by the time we finally taxied to our gate and shuffled off, I had come to his death. All that time I had been hurtling through the sky at 550 miles per hour and 6 miles up. But I scarcely noticed; I barely thought about it. It just was. I do it all the time.
I remember the first time I flew, or the first time I flew as a person old enough to remember doing it. The very fact that I remember it so vividly displays how important it was to me. My whole family was taking a long flight from Toronto, Canada to London, England. Everything was new and exciting. I remember the miniature cans our soft drinks came in; the meal we ate mid-flight, the movie that played on the screens ahead of us and the feeling in the pit of my stomach as the plane rose and fell with the turbulence. I remember that as the British Airways Boeing 747 left the ground, a poem came to my mind—a poem my father had once shown me.
Oh! I have slipped the surly bonds of earth,
And danced the skies on laughter-silvered wings;
Sunward I’ve climbed, and joined the tumbling mirth
Of sun-split clouds, —and done a hundred things
You have not dreamed of —Wheeled and soared and swung
High in the sunlit silence. Hov’ring there
I’ve chased the shouting wind along, and flung
My eager craft through footless halls of air…
Up, up the long, delirious, burning blue
I’ve topped the wind-swept heights with easy grace
Where never lark or even eagle flew —
And, while with silent lifting mind I’ve trod
The high untrespassed sanctity of space,
Put out my hand, and touched the face of God.
It was so new and fresh. It was so exciting. Like the poet, I was amazed at the wonder of it all.
That was then. This is now. Now I barely think about flying except to register how boring and routine it has become and to mutter a complaint when my flight is delayed. Never mind that I’ll soon by moving 550 miles per hour 6 miles above the earth. No, never mind that at all. What’s important is that my flight is going to be fifteen minutes late. Horrors!
Life has a way of becoming routine, a way of losing its wonder. A few days ago I went out with some friends and as we sat and talked my friend Nick told me how beautiful and how smart my little girl is. And he’s right—she’s both of those things and more. I’m not sure, though, when I had last stopped to think about it. After all, I see her every day. Several months ago, my small group paused one evening to encourage my wife with some of the evidences of God’s grace they see in her life. Though I love her dearly, I was surprised at how long it had been since I had considered many of these evidences of God’s work in her. I guess I’d somehow lost the wonder.
And then there’s my faith. I know the kind of man I am. I know the lusts and the pride in my heart, the anger, the sarcasm the ungodliness. I know who I am and I know what I deserve. But. But God. But God in his goodness set me apart and gave me a gift—a wondrous gift greater than any other. He gave me what he had; he gave me what I needed; he gave me his Son; he gave me Himself. And yet sometimes it’s just like rocketing through the air with my nose buried in a book. It’s mundane; it’s expected; it’s old; it’s just the way it has been for so long that I scarcely remember (or perhaps scarcely care to remember) what it was like before.
But oh, how I long for those moments when God gives me that glimpse of just where he has taken me and what he has given me. How I long to know and to believe, to experience afresh, to rejoice in my heart, to marvel, to appreciate, to love, to feel.
Please, don’t let me lose the wonder of who you are. Don’t let me lose the wonder of what you’ve done. Please, don’t let me lose the wonder.





Comments (26) »
1. Grace
January 12, 2009
8:39 AM
Great post Tim!
2. Betsy Markman
January 12, 2009
8:55 AM
Beautiful!
3. Dave
January 12, 2009
9:01 AM
Tim,
What a great reminder in our busy lives. We often forget to feel the wonder and awe of what God had sone for us. Thanks for the reminder.
I can tell that one of your favorite statements in scripture is ‘But God…’ mine too. That statement alone should make us shudder in awe and amazement that the God of the universe would even choose to commune with us.
and call us His own. But He did and Hedoes! WOW!
4. Boaly
January 12, 2009
9:24 AM
Yeh, Brilliant post, I hate flying (never get used to it) so I guess i’ve never felt this wonder about it, but thinking about it (while on the ground) I can agree, it is a wonder to be in the air.
And a brilliant pointer to the wonder of Christ (whom, unlike flying I do love).
5. Jody
January 12, 2009
9:36 AM
I had the same experience several months ago as I’ve walked through the valley of the shadow of death when I stood at my dad’s bedside when he passed from this life to the next to see his Savior. When all is stripped away, Jesus was there and he showed so much more of himself to me, a glimpse of who he is. Great post.
6. Winnie
January 12, 2009
9:59 AM
This is so timely, lost a family member this week.
I posted on another thread here, and noticed that you were no longer taking comments. You can delete mine if it was a problem.
7. Winnie
January 12, 2009
10:05 AM
This is so timely, lost a family member this week.
I posted on another thread here, and noticed that you were no longer taking comments. You can delete mine if it was a problem.
8. Brenda@CoffeeTeaBooks&Me
January 12, 2009
10:24 AM
How I LOVE that poem. I believe it was read when before or during the memorial for the shuttle crew.
Sigh… I wish I could fly like that. My husband is an engineer and he has attempted many times to explain the theory of “lift” to me, which makes it possible for heavy equipment to stay in light air.
The last time I flew, I kept having to remind myself it was worth it as I was going to see my young grandchildren. That was my mantra… grandchildren, grandchildren, worth it, worth it.
9. jessica mell
January 12, 2009
10:33 AM
Religious *affections*, indeed !
:)
We need our God to kick-start the heart.
10. Doug
January 12, 2009
10:35 AM
Have you listened to the Getty’s song about your closing thoughts? It’s great.
11. Lisa
January 12, 2009
11:42 AM
I hope to take your message to heart today and spend time “in wonder”. God is so good.
12. Lisa
January 12, 2009
11:50 AM
I hope to take your message to heart today and spend time “in wonder”. God is so good.
13. Demian Farnworth
January 12, 2009
11:56 AM
I so share your sentiments. To be children again… Thanks for being honest.
14. Cheryl
January 12, 2009
12:37 PM
That’s why Paul prayed two times in Ephesians for those saints to really KNOW things that they already intellectually knew on another level. It reminds me that I continue to need the Spirit’s enlightenment to really grasp the wonder of who HE IS and how He has blessed me. This awe and wonder then fuels the Christian life in Ephesians 4-6.
15. Dan Hagan
January 12, 2009
12:39 PM
Tim,
Great post as usual. In fact your consistent high quality has elevated my expectations so much that complacency is quickly setting in… Help…! ;—)
The poem you quoted was written by a 19 year old “pilot in training” by the name of John Magee. Here’s a short version of his story:
http://www.bartleby.com/73/603.html
In fact when I was a kid (1960s). A local television station would use a video of a jet fighter flying through the clouds while this poem was artfully being read as part of the sign-off for the day. Even as a child, this poem would cause the hair on the back of my neck to rise. This video was then immediately followed by the National Anthem, and then a test pattern for a while, and then snow on the screen (no signal). This was all done back when TV stations actually stopped broadcasting at night (around 2:00AM).
I know I’m dating myself! God has been very generous! I turned 55 last week.
In Christ,
Dan…
16. Laurie
January 12, 2009
12:39 PM
A beautiful post, and very timely for me as I’m longing to love Him as desperately as I did at the first.
17. Cheryl
January 12, 2009
12:43 PM
That’s why Paul prayed two times in Ephesians for those saints to really KNOW things that they already intellectually knew on another level. It reminds me that I continue to need the Spirit’s enlightenment to really grasp the wonder of who HE IS and how He has blessed me. This awe and wonder then fuels the Christian life in Ephesians 4-6.
18. Dan Hagan
January 12, 2009
1:13 PM
Tim,
The server has been painfully slow in accepting submissions and this may also be the reason for some of the double posts…
Dan…
19. Marilyn
January 12, 2009
2:34 PM
Beautiful post and many beautiful comments have followed. Thank you for an awesome post Tim, and thank you commenters for all your lovely thoughts.
It is always a precious gift when the Lord touches our hearts and allows us to feel that great sense of wonder.
20. Marilyn
January 12, 2009
2:43 PM
Beautiful post and many beautiful comments have followed. Thank you for an awesome post Tim, and thank you commenters for all your lovely thoughts.
It is always a precious gift when the Lord touches our hearts and allows us to feel that great sense of wonder.
21. Marilyn
January 12, 2009
2:46 PM
Beautiful post and many beautiful comments have followed. Thank you for an awesome post Tim, and thank you commenters for all your lovely thoughts.
It is always a precious gift when the Lord touches our hearts and allows us to feel that great sense of wonder.
22. Christine
January 12, 2009
3:46 PM
That was a beautiful post! A great reminder to stop and be amazed by our amazing God! That poem always make me think, like Brenda, of Reagan quoting it while memorializing the Challenger crew.
23. underdogtheology
January 12, 2009
8:21 PM
Part of retaining the worshipful awe and wonder at the goodness and grace of God is the cultivation of the character trait of humility. And the Lord knows how to keep His children low and worshipping.
Those thorns are our friends, keeping the wonder alive and fresh.
http://underdogtheology.blogspot.com/
24. brian bousquet
January 12, 2009
9:34 PM
Tim
Thanks brother,I needed to hear this and slow down,(why do we rush so much?)Oh to have this dangerous wonder again! That His small still voice would resonate and become Him within me,
God be with you
Brian
25. Mike
January 13, 2009
8:50 AM
Amen Tim, thats great!
26. Andrew Faris
January 14, 2009
3:21 PM
Great stuff Tim. That analogy is pretty much perfect and I think most of us experience that same thing.