Monday Morning Music Ministry

Start Your Week with a Spiritual Song in Your Heart

Where’s Jesus?

6-27-11

Casual thoughts about random memories have brought me to a new way to see Jesus.

I was talking with a friend recently about travel memories. Many of my trips to Europe have been intertwined with music. I have made a couple trips specifically to attend music festivals, so that’s a gimme. There were a couple of examples where, travel-weary, I stumbled on concerts being offered of favorite pieces. Those performances – one in the little Alpine village of Berchtesgaden, one in an ancient cathedral in Paris – were amazing medicine at the time, and amazing memories still. Mozart in Salzburg. If you know Mozart’s music, your jealousy can officially start now.

Except as music touches our souls, these were not specifically spiritual moments. And Travel is a creature unto itself, as travel junkies know. In my conversation, memories of great meals, great wines, and great friends also were shared.

But one memory has symbolized a truth; that is, once I heard something in a new way, and it made me see things in a new way. A hotel where I stay in Rome is near the Basilica of Saint Paul “Outside the Walls,” so called because it traditionally is regarded as where St Paul was buried after martyrdom, and its location was outside what used to be the system of walled defenses. I visit that church, with its courtyard beneath a giant mosaic of Christ on His throne, brilliantly reflecting tiles of real gold on sunny days.

Inside, once, I was deep in prayer and I gradually was conscious of music – not organ music; there was no service. It was voices, young voices, and a guitar; it was language I didn’t know, but the song was a praise and worship tune from the US, I did know quite well. The soft music echoed through the huge basilica. Was I hearing angels?

I let my eyes adjust, and saw that it was a group of school children, seated in several pews, and their leader playing the guitar. I later learned they were from South America. A Christian group, felt led to break out in song, worshiping in quite an appropriate place.

This could be one more travel tale, or a music connection. But I have realized a greater lesson. I was from one continent, on another continent, encountering this group from a third continent. I spoke English; they spoke Spanish; we were in Italy. We were strangers. Yet a worship song, no matter the words or tune but because of the One being worshiped, made me feel as close as family.

A few moments earlier I had been deep in prayer in a special setting. I probably would not have thought I could possibly feel closer to Jesus. Well, I did, instantly, when those kids softly started singing… and it wasn’t just their voices, or that He suddenly showed up. He was always there. He is always there, and here. We always can try to see Him a little better.

There are a million ways to do this. When you see things in threes – traffic lights, for instance – be reminded of the Trinity and thank God for His Holy Spirit. We have already talked about Father’s Day, and the thought we should have about our Heavenly Father. And so on.

But then I thought of something that might not be accurate theology, but is a pretty good road map for my “walk.” It is also in the category of Jesus always being around us, and how we can look or listen a little better to find Him. Jesus, at the Last Supper, took the bread and wine and, speaking symbolically in my view, referred to them as His Body and Blood, “broken for us and shed for us.” He then shared the meal.

Is it possible that Jesus did not only mean, “when you gather in a religious service once a week or once a month, and consecrate the elements, do this in remembrance of Me”? But might He also have meant, “As oft as you eat something like bread or drink something, let them be reminders that I broke my body for you, and I shed my blood for you.”

I try to keep to that! And many other reminders during every day, who Jesus is; and what He has done; and how close He is. Try that yourself! Even casual thoughts and random memories will take on new meanings. Where’s Jesus? You’ll see.

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Here is another, and random, example of cross-cultural spiritual kinship. The Boy’s Choir of Sofia, Bulgaria, singing the the rousing “Gloria!” by Vivaldi.

Click: Gloria!

Category: Christianity, Contemplation, Jesus

Tagged: , , , , , , , , ,

4 Responses

  1. Amy says:

    I also had an experience in Italy that led me to think differently about communion. I think that growing up in the Midwest, where wine was taboo and bread was “wonder,” the elements seemed strange and set apart from the daily experience of life. However, in Italy, the ubiquity of the bread and the wine and the florid extravagance of the churches (in comparison to the self-conscious plainness of Protestant churches) made me think that maybe communion was something to be touched and celebrated every day. In Italy, it is as if you are being invited to think of Christ every time you sit at a cafe, surrounded by elements, in the shadow of a cathedral. And the music isn’t bad, either…

  2. Amen. Yes, a different perspective (even if honored more in the breach these days…?) and the peasant bread itself is evocative and symbolic on its own! (Amen about the music too!)

  3. Chris Orr says:

    So true Rick. A few years agi I was talking with a friend who had carried out a research on the early church ( as much as possible considering the little historical information outside of the Bible)! He found that up untill 600-700AD Christians who broke bread did so with enormous awe , respect, and reverence. They expected the presence of the Holy Spirit to be with them at every time they broke bread which was on a very regular basis from house to house as a meal. That was before a branch of them formed the Catholic church who then brought in the doctrine of transubstantiation. Today many churches treat breaking of bread or communion as an annoying ‘add on’ that has to be done just so that they can still be recognised as a ‘Christian Church’. Jesus went alone to pray very often because He knew praying was as much about listening to His Father as speaking. I would love to find a large church today that has time for silence to hear and feel the presence of God like you did in Italy.It would seem that our Western churches have organized God out of our meetings with ‘programmes’ and ‘running orders’.

  4. Deacon Jim Stagg says:

    Sorry, Chris, but if you read Justyn Martyr, you will find the Catholic Mass today was celebrated by those “early” Christians.

    And, Rick, I appreciate your feelings of comfort in various settings where you do seek Jesus, His Father and the Spirit. But my question for you, as for all who consider the Breaking of the Bread as “symbolic”, is: Don’t you LITERALLY believe John’s Gospel?

    We, as Catholics, do.

    Peace be with you.

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About The Author

... Rick Marschall is the author of 74 books and hundreds of magazine articles in many fields, from popular culture (Bostonia magazine called him "perhaps America's foremost authority on popular culture") to history and criticism; country music; television history; biography; and children's books. He is a former political cartoonist, editor of Marvel Comics, and writer for Disney comics. For 20 years he has been active in the Christian field, writing devotionals and magazine articles; he was co-author of "The Secret Revealed" with Dr Jim Garlow. His biography of Johann Sebastian Bach for the “Christian Encounters” series was published by Thomas Nelson. He currently is writing a biography of the Rev Jimmy Swaggart and his cousin Jerry Lee Lewis. Read More