“The
wind gives our children the spirit of life.”—Chief Seattle
They
say that God is in the wind and as a boy growing up in the windy mid-western
Kansas plains I came to instinctively sense this. I was keenly aware of this
especially as I hunted the prairie grasses for wild quail and prairie chickens
while the ubiquitous winds carried them away ahead of me. The native Kansa Indians were known as “the
people of the south wind”. Jesus
mentioned in John 3:8 (just before the well-known John 3:16 verse) that “God’s
Spirit is like the wind that blows wherever it wishes. You hear its sound, but
you don’t know where it comes from or where it is going.” God made his presence
known at Pentecost via a violent wind, fire, and his Holy Spirit. However, when Elijah needed a message in 1
Kings 19 there was a great wind, an earthquake and finally a fire, but God was
not in any of these. Then God’s message
came in a gentle whisper. It’s up to us
to be aware and many times to retreat from the chaos and noise of the world
around us and simply listen humbly and quietly to the silence born on gentle
breezes.
God has communicated to humankind over the centuries
verbally, with angels, in dreams, and through His Son. Since the time of that
revelation of himself over 2,000 years ago, he is more to be felt than
seen. I’ve been fascinated by Native
Americans because I believe they lived a harsh but harmonious life out in God’s
creation every day of their lives. They were convinced of the existence of a
Great Spirit and the sacredness of the earth. They viewed winds as the
personification of a divine messenger and an autonomous living force. They observed the path of the winds to be
this divine being sweeping through the land.
And they considered this being to be a counselor, a term that also
defines the role of the Holy Spirit. The
Navajo, Apache and Hopi use a diamond shape to symbolize the powerful four-fold
nature of the four winds: freedom, eternity, unity and balance.
It’s interesting to note that both the Hebrew and Greek words
for wind, breath and spirit are the same. God breathed life into the first
human beings. The air around us has been described as the kingdom of the
heavens. We certainly can’t survive without it. Is it merely composed of
natural elements like oxygen and carbon dioxide, or is there something more
transparent and spiritual at work in this rarefied air?
When we’re out in God’s creation and enjoying the experience
of the life he has given to us, we can begin to feel his presence. I believe
God is in these winds more so than anything else in his created universe. And
these caressing breezes provide a closeness for some of the most sublime
moments in our life as a child of God.
In
the Old Testament book of Ezekiel, the prophet had a vision of God leading him
to a valley of dry human bones. The dry bones represented the hopelessly and
spiritually dead condition of the people who were living against the wind. And God told Ezekiel to prophesy that the
breath of the four winds would come and breathe into those slain, that they
might live. And life was restored as the bones rose up and lived again! Once
God breathes His spirit back into a people, they will have new life!
What a great writing , I truly enjoy all of them, this one was special, Love you Happy forth. Your friend, bill J
ReplyDelete