Ben is a fan of movies. He often has two or three playing at once. Then he loves to quiz me on questions he knows the answer to.
"Did the Tin man get a heart?" His smile is enormous.
"Yes, Ben, he did!! What scene was it in?" I never tire of asking him the minutia of factoring, and the sequence of action in his favorite flicks.
44th, BTW.
Recently he watched the
scene in Hunchback of Notre Dame where Esmerelda prays. I had not realized that God was welcome in a cartoon. She is a gypsy and feels like an outcast. But then again Jesus was marginalized too, so maybe He would listen to her.
Many of us spend time on the fringe. It seems to be almost inevitable that we feel isolated at least some of the time. It can be exacerbated by the distancing we all find ourselves in. Yet, sometimes that gap is what it takes to urge us toward prayer. We need a bridge to find our way back to center, and the sense of loss can render us willing to ask for help.
Asking for help is what children do easily, without hesitation. Grown ups are more reticent.
Relationships are a way to step in from the edge. Yet even in marriage, we can feel painfully alone. Prayer can be a way to come back from the hinterland, when we ask God to tamp down the loneliness.
We might even get a new heart in the process.
I will give you a new heart and a new spirit will I put within you. And I will take the heart of stone out of your flesh and I will give you a heart of flesh.
Ezekiel 36