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Hearing God’s Music
by Max Lucado
Let's imagine that you want to learn to dance. Being the rational, cerebral
person you are, you go to a bookstore and buy a book on dancing. You
take the book home and get to work.
Finally, you think you’ve got it, and you invite your wife to come
in and watch. You hold the book open and follow the instructions step
by step. You even read the words aloud so she’ll know that you’ve
done your homework. “Lean with your right shoulder,” and
so you lean. “Now step with your right foot,” and so you
step. “Turn slowly to the left,” and so you do.
You continue to read, then dance, read, then dance, until the dance is
completed. You plop exhausted on the couch, look at your wife, and proclaim, “I
executed it perfectly.”
“You executed it, all right,” she sighs. “You killed
it.”
“What?”
“You forgot the most important part. Where is the music?”
Music?
You never thought about music. You remembered the book. You learned the
rules. You laid out the pattern. But you forgot the music.
“Do it again,” she says, putting in a CD. “This time
don’t worry about the steps; just follow the music.”
She extends her hand and the music begins. The next thing you know, you
are dancing—and you don’t even have the book.
We Christians are prone to follow the book while ignoring the music.
We master the doctrine, outline the chapters, memorize the dispensations,
debate the rules, and stiffly step down the dance floor of life with
no music in our hearts. We measure each step, calibrate each turn, and
flop into bed each night exhausted from another day of dancing by the
book.
Dancing with no music is tough stuff.
“Let God have you, and let God love you—and don’t be surprised
if your heart begins to hear music you’ve never heard and your feet learn
to dance as never before.”
~ Max Lucado ~
From A
Gentle Thunder: Hearing God Through the Storm
Copyright 1995, Max Lucado
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