I love words.
I collect them, like some people collect baseball cards.
I have a deep appreciation for a well-structured sentence. When I find a word that I’ve never read before, I get a feeling akin to joy. When an author explains a concept in such a way that it causes me to pause and think and consider their argument—and then causes me to write a counter-argument or supporting essay….
Nerdy. I know.
However, here’s the thing: There is something about writing words as opposed to speaking words that truly pulls at my mind and soul.
I’ve always written something. Since I was a little girl. Mostly I would just write what I saw around me: The sky was shockingly turquoise. The snow was biting my ankles. My school’s gym is cavernous.
On very rare occasions, I would try to write a “story”, but I never got very far. I am not creative, nor am I imaginative. I don’t think I could write a work of fiction if my very life depended on it. It’s not that I don’t enjoy fiction. I do, sometimes. But I don’t know how to write what is not true. Story-writing eludes me. I’ve written one children’s book, and it was like pulling teeth.
But observations? Yes. Arguments? Absolutely. Debates? Any time. Thoughts? Constantly. Prayers? Daily.
Writing, quite literally, keeps me sane. (See what I did there?)
Sometimes, my brain is so full of thoughts and words and concepts and questions, that it nearly feels like it will burst. Writing helps me sort all of that out. If I can put one thought at a time, down in a document, it settles my mind and my soul. I’ve been accused of overthinking things; and that accusation would be accurate. But I don’t know how to turn my brain off. But writing helps me think clearer. Sensibly. Rationally. It helps me see more clearly where my thinking is wrong, and helps push me toward right thinking.
Writing also settles my soul. If I can put what churns me up, into concrete words on a page, my mind and soul both settle down. I find this especially true in the writing of prayers. 90% of my praying is done through writing. And those prayers are password-protected and locked away on a hard drive. I never go back and read them; I don’t have to. Just knowing that they are there, helps assure my soul that God sees, He knows, and He hears my pathetic attempts at prayer.
I love to write. I love words. They are dear to me.
But, what I love infinitely more than writing, is reading the words that God chose to leave with us, as a revelation of Himself, for us.
I am so, very grateful, that God chose the written word–scriptures–to show Himself to us in a very real and tangible way.
In fact, at the very beginning of the book of John, John refers to Jesus as “The Word”:
But why? Why was Jesus “the Word”?
I love John Piper’s explanation of this:
Truth. Yes.
The words of Jesus were the truth of God. The person of Jesus is the truth of God.
And while words clarified who He is and what He has done, it is Himself that was being and is revealed, through the words we read in our Bibles.
Jesus is the Word. And Jesus is truth.
And those words are precious to me, and that truth is precious to me.
And Jesus…He is precious, to me.
So. I am so grateful for the gift of His Word. And, for the gift of The Word.
And, I am grateful for the avenue of writing words, and the settled knowing that He sees and knows what I pour out, onto paper.
And, I am grateful for you, dear reader, for taking the time to read my words. So very grateful. It’s a strange experience, knowing your words are being read by others. A bit disconcerting, actually. My hope is that you will find my words to be authentic and real, and that always they will point to the only true Word and our only hope, the one who Thomas, the “doubting disciple”, came to proclaim “My Lord, and My God.”