I wish this meant that I could learn in ANY way. I'd be a genius. Alas, it does not.
What it does seem to mean is that I learn best when ALL of my senses are engaged. Do you know how seldom anyone gets all of their senses engaged? Sometimes I work really hard to add my own touch, sight, taste, smell, and movement to what I'm hearing in a learning situation. I can be a distraction to anyone who sits with me.
God must have really wanted me to get the pastor's sermon on 1 Corinthians 13 this morning. Because not only did every single song we sang in worship resound with the teaching, and not only was I smack dab in the middle of a church family that I love, love, love --- but he plopped a beautifully multi-sensory lesson right down in front of me.
The pastor said that love is a choice.
I wrote, "Choose to love" at the top of the page in my Bible by 1 Corinthians 13. I was doing what I could to get the important points to my other senses. The pastor had a tomato, and that really helped (a story for another day) -- but God had something even better than either of our feeble attempts at being multi-sensory.
A family of three was on the pew in front of me. I'll call them "the three bears." Mama Bear and Papa Bear had chosen to love the Baby they had with them. I didn't know his story -- but I can suppose that it hadn't been the happiest of tales lately. That's why he was with The Bears. He wasn't feeling well, so he was a bit clingy. I caught a faint whiff of children's Tylenol on his breath, so I knew Mama and Papa Bear were caring for him the way that mamas and papas do.
It soon became obvious that Baby Bear understood that these two were "all in" on this love thing. And he was eager to soak up every bit of it that he could.
It was as if there was this chocolate fountain flowing out of Mama and Papa Bear (I know it should be porridge - but doesn't chocolate sound so much yummier?) Baby Bear just couldn't get enough of it.
He kept switching back and forth from one set of arms to the other. It wasn't that Mama Bear's love was too soft or too cold -- or that Papa Bear's love was too hard or too hot. Both of them were full of a love that was so very "just right" that Baby seemed to want to be wrapped up in it. He'd be in one bear hug and would look over and see the empty arms of the other bear -- and he'd make the jump.
Back and forth he went, with Mama and Papa Bear never failing to welcome him with open arms. At one point I just had to laugh out loud. Mama and Papa Bear both grinned at me. I like to think they were sort of glad to know that someone else was seeing this and loving it as much as they were. I hope they didn't just think I was being nosy. I was. But I hope they didn't think it.
The preaching started stepping on my toes when the pastor got to all those great characteristics of love.
You know the ones I'm talking about, don't you? They're those verses your mom made you and your sister memorize when you were being especially mean to each other. They're those verses that give lie to your half-hearted, "Love? Sure, I love" -- because when measured by God's standards your love doesn't half measure up. Those verses.
Love is patient, love is kind. It does not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud. It does not dishonor others, it is not self-seeking, it is not easily angered, it keeps no record of wrongs. Love does not delight in evil but rejoices with the truth. It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres.
I found myself thinking of a few people that I just don't love all that well -- and I started making excuses in my head.
"God, you know I could love others better if only they just weren't so... OTHER."
Baby drew my attention again. He had really straight and thin hair. But Mama and Papa Bear both had lots and lots of curly hair. Papa Bear even had it all over his face.
Did Baby let the otherness of the Bears bother him? Absolutely not.
He was fascinated. He played with Papa Bear's beard, letting the curls spring between his fingers. He even buried his face in it -- then, as it tickled his neck, he raised his head and backed away a little so that he could just gaze at all those curls with utter delight.
This Baby loved the otherness of Papa and Mama Bear. He basked in it. He basked in them.
Somehow or other, those curls seemed to be a quintessential part of the love story Baby was experiencing with Mama and Papa Bear -- these two bears who had chosen to love him. Their otherness seemed only to magnify their love.
So, then I started thinking about God (about time, right?).
He's really, really, really OTHER. It's actually sort of what holiness is -- the otherness of God.
But he loves me. Even though I'm an other to him. I'm made in his image, but I'm flawed. I'm other.
And it's precisely because of his otherness that I am compelled by his love to love him in return.
That's something worth basking in.
And maybe when I bask in his love for me and mine for him, I'll get better at loving others. Maybe the love will make the words and the service that come pretty easily into something worthwhile.
I think it will. Because love never fails.
It may not fix everything. But it will not fail.
The Three Bears showed me that.