
The Divine Trajectory
By
Michael Bruner
“In the
beginning was the Word, and the Word was
with God, and the Word was God.”
John 1:1
Each semester in my
Introduction to Literature courses, my
opening lecture begins with this verse from
John’s prologue in order to convince my students
of something they tacitly already know: that
words matter. It used to be (when rhetoric was
still a course of study) that the state of one’s
soul was reflected in the words one used; that,
to put it succinctly, eloquence was next to
godliness. But no more. Nowadays, if your words
run longer than a sound bite, you risk being
labeled verbose. Or worse: boring.
When God wanted to connect with his creation
most intimately, however, he came to us as Word.
Not as picture. Or idea. Or song. Or vision. Not
even as one of the elementals:
Truth—Goodness—Beauty. Word was, and is, God’s
medium of choice. But why?
John’s prologue moves
almost imperceptibly from word to life to light
(“What has come into being in him was life,
and the life was the light of all people”)—through
what I call the divine trajectory. In other
words, a discernable direction, imbedded in
creation, starts at word and moves towards
light. Science calls it the expanding universe:
the farther away objects are from us, the faster
they move. With sufficient speed, matter becomes
light (e=mc2), and the universe moves
from mass-filled to light-filled—an elegant
scientific equation for a deep theological
truth.
Indeed, when God decided
to create in the first place, the same elements
were present: word, life, and light: “In the
beginning when God created the heavens and the
earth, the earth was a formless void and
darkness covered the face of the deep, while a
wind from God swept over the face of the waters.
Then God said, ‘Light!’ And there was light.”
And with light came life.
Words, then, shed light,
not just figuratively but, apparently, quite
literally. And in so doing, they are
life-giving; they allow us to see, to hear—in
essence, to know. As words resound in the
silence, so light shines in the darkness; and
the darkness cannot put it out.
God chose to come to us as
Word because words bring life. But words also
can destroy. Satan distorts. Light bends. But in
their undistorted state, words bring unbending
light and allow us to communicate, to be
intimate with each other and with God, to
understand. By using words, we can cast the
darkness out of our own lives; indeed, out of
life itself.
Words matter because God
matters. |