Dorothy Sayers was probably speaking for herself when in one of her mystery stories Harriet Vane says of writing prose, “When you get the thing dead right, and know it’s dead right, there’s no excitement like it. It’s marvelous. It makes you feel like God on the Seventh Day.”
Looking over my blog, I noticed
that I’m closing in on the completion of four years of blog posts. While I don’t fashion myself a great writer
by any means, the quote above from a Dorothy Sayers novel captures my feeling
when I write and preach (which, since I write my sermons, are like two peas in
the same pod).
When I began the blog, I wasn’t
sure how long I’d do it or if I’d like doing it. Perhaps I was just putting pressure on myself
to prepare yet something else in a life already full of preparations. I determined from the get-go that I would
only write when I had something to say (not a luxury I have in preaching unfortunately). For the most part, I’ve honored that, and, by
God’s grace, I’ve stuck with it.
Not long ago, a friend of mine,
who reads my blog from time to time, was thinking about starting a blog of her
own. She wanted to be sure, though, that
cranking out blog posts would be worth the time it took her to write them. “Do you have a lot a lot of people read your
stuff?” she asked.
“No, not many,” I replied. “If I post on a controversial issue, I get a
bigger readership. But I don’t do much
posting like that. My regular posts get
an average read of 150-200 people.”
“That’s it?” she said. “Then why do you do it?”
“I do it for me,” I said. “I do it because I love to write. It’s cathartic and therapeutic for me to get
my thoughts out in front of me in black and white. It helps me process life. And I also do it as an offering to God. That’s why I call my blog Life at the Altar. I enjoy looking for traces of God in the
everyday experiences of life: family, work, current events, church, death. Sometimes God is so thick in things I can’t
see anything else. And sometimes I have
to grab my magnifying glass and fingerprint kit, put on my Sherlock Holmes hat,
and sleuth Him out. But I enjoy the
process and I enjoy writing about it.”
“You mean you’d blog even if no
one read your stuff?”
“I’d be lying if I said I didn’t
wish I had more readers, but I’m pretty sure I’d keep it up even if nobody read
it all. Besides, God reads it, I think,
and if it brings a smile to His face, that’s good enough for me.”
So far as I know, my friend has
yet to begin a blog.
I began mine in 2009, and 188
posts later, thank you for taking a few minutes two or three times a month to
read Life at the Altar. Thanks for sharing posts that touch you on
Facebook and for inviting others to read it too. The subtitle at the top of the page reads, “Altars are places where people meet God,
and because God is everywhere, we can meet Him anywhere.” I hope you’ve met God in my posts. I think that, too, would put a smile on God’s
face. And I know it puts a smile on
mine.