Slow Down! Part 3
“Is it nothing to you, all you who pass by? Look around and see. Is any suffering like my suffering that was inflicted on me, that the LORD brought on me in the day of his fierce anger? Lamentations 1:12
At a Metro station in Washington D.C. on a cold January morning, a young violinist played several classical compositions as people rushed by. After three minutes, a middle-aged man slowed briefly, then hurried away. Thirty seconds later the young man received his first dollar; a woman threw it in his case without stopping. Six minutes later a man leaned against a wall to listen for a few minutes, then looked at his watch, and walked on. After ten minutes a little boy stopped, but his mum hurried him along. Other kids did the same, but every parent, without exception, rushed them on. The young musician played for forty-five minutes. During that time seven people stopped and listened for a while, and twenty gave money as they walked past. He collected a total of $32, and when he stopped playing nobody noticed or applauded. What’s remarkable is this: the violinist was Joshua Bell, one of the world’s greatest musicians, and he played some of the most intricate pieces ever written, on a violin worth $3.5 million. Two days before, he’d sold out a Boston theatre where seats averaged $100 to listen to him play the same music he played at the Metro station that morning, where only one person recognized him. So here’s the question: if you’ve no time to stop and listen to one of the world’s best musicians playing the finest music ever written, on one of the most beautiful instruments ever made, what else are you missing as you barrel through life? It’s worth thinking about, isn’t it? (Note: Joshua Bell played incognito as part of a social experiment conducted by The Washington Post.)
Prayer
Heavenly Father, help me slow down and “listen to the music” that is playing around me. In Jesus’ Name, Amen
Further ‘dumbing-down’ of America as schools have given up on history, constitutional studies, art, music, science and now even math, as inherently racist. The most famous symphony ever composed, Beethoven’s 9th, only has 1.5million listener ‘hits” for the Berlin Symphony recording conducted by Herbert von Karajan, while a recent no-name pop star’s recording got 400million ‘hits.’ Artistic beauty is being subverted by banality, talent by gimmicks, hard work by the lure of free money, and sound teaching by “itching ears accumulating for themselves teachers to suit their own passions.”
Yet, God reigns, salvation is by faith through grace, a heavenly home is being prepared for all who believe, Joshua Bell will have no trouble having people listening to him play, and I have Joy in Jesus, because I still have time to share the Gospel with those “who are like sheep without a shepherd!”
Thank you for providing an “archive” of your posts! I have not been deleting them from my email account as I did not want to “lose” any. But now, I realize I can “clean up” my email box (and save “space) and just review the well-organized archive to search for a devotion that I want to re-visit.