Have you recently experienced being awestruck? Being out of doors and enjoying nature can easily inspire a sense of awe: that overwhelming feeling of wonder, sometimes tinged with fear.
I remember being awestruck.
I remember being awestruck the first time I snorkeled. As weirdly-shaped fish darted past me, and I looked down on a rainbow of coral, I found myself in a fabulous world about which I knew absolutely nothing. I was truly out of my depth.
Camping in a National Park in Argentina where my husband Rick and I were the only visitors (it was notably off-season), we brewed up each chilly morning as Andean Condors soared past snow-capped mountains. It was glorious, and also slightly scary to be far from all other humans. In a vast, harsh landscape, I felt very small and vulnerable.
In 2002, I helped to lead a holiday in Lebanon for A Rocha supporters. Our local guide took us into the stunning Jeita Grotto, a network of limestone caverns formed millions of years ago. Suddenly, my own life felt unbearably fleeting as I gazed at floodlit stalagmites, stalactites, pillars and draperies which had grown, drip by drip, over the aeons.
Feelings of awe can strike much closer to home, here in SW Scotland. Sunrises. Sunsets. Skeins of Pink-footed Geese from the Icelandic tundra, arriving in early autumn, their wild clamoring drawing me outside to search the skies for long straggling Vs.
Sometimes, in our garden, we run a light-trap at night to catch moths. Before I release them after identification, I choose one to study for a few minutes, taking in the details: sometimes a furry thorax, feathery antennae, delicate wing patterns and dark, expressionless eyes. I reflect on how little I—and others—know about the behavior, population trends and needs of small creatures on our own doorstep.
Recently, I listened to a BBC Radio Serial, ‘More Wow’, presented by science journalist Jo Marchant. In five short programs, she explored the elusive emotion of awe and interviewed people—involved in activities as diverse as space exploration, calisthenic exercise, cave-diving and engineering—for whom awe has been life-changing, in ways big and small.
Ron Garan, who worked for six months on the International Space Station, spoke of his daily experience of awe as he looked out on the beauty of the Earth, gas clouds, auroras and lightning storms.
Responding with awe to everyday experiences is a sensitivity which we can cultivate.
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Few of us can enjoy such a privilege but he finds that, now earthbound, he is much more easily moved to awe than he was before. He believes that responding with awe to everyday experiences is a sensitivity which we can cultivate.
The interviewees’ common conviction was that awesome experiences snap us out of our finite world. They enable us to realize that we are part of something much larger than ourselves and make us feel more connected: to other people and other species.
Momentarily, we forget our petty worries and afterwards; they are more in perspective. Research at the University of California, Berkeley, has shown that experiences of awe can make us kinder, more generous, more respectful of others. The same could be said, of course, about Christian worship when we focus, not on ourselves, but on our Creator and Savior.
As Christmas approaches, many of us will be caught up in all kinds of busyness. Perhaps now, during Advent, is a good time to pause and reflect on the story of Jesus’ birth. I have been slowly reading the first two chapters of Luke’s gospel, savoring each drama: a priest in fragrant robes, struck dumb; a teenage girl offered a once-in-the-world’s-lifetime privilege; a babe in the womb recognizing a stranger; stockmen suddenly abandoning their livestock.
Each of these events inspired awe and wonder at the time. Each of them, if we bring our God-given imagination to the stories, pondering what the participants saw, and heard, and felt, can provoke awe and worship in us, even if we have heard, read or taught the stories many times.
It is all too easy, at Christmas, just to look at the Christ child in the manger. When you read of the birth of Jesus, of his humility and vulnerability, why not also take time to meditate on Colossians 1:15-20, which speaks of Jesus’ supremacy. St Paul tells us that all things: angels and angel fish, men and man orchids, barnacles and barnacle geese were created by Jesus and for Jesus.
May you delight in the certainties, and the mysteries, of the season.
Originally published by A Rocha International. Republished with permission.
Barbara Mearns has been involved with A Rocha since its beginnings, and for many years ran the A Rocha International office from her home in SW Scotland. Now retired, she writes an irregular blog about local wildlife at mearnswildlife.wordpress.com and spends as much time as possible recording dragonflies, butterflies, moths and birds. With her husband, Richard, she has researched the lives of many early naturalists, most recently for their updated Biographies for Birdwatchers (2022) see mearnsbooks.com.
A Rocha is a global family of conservation organizations working together to live out God’s calling to care for creation ?and equip others to do likewise. A Rocha means ‘The Rock’ in Portuguese and the initiative is present in more than 20 countries around the world. They provide a missional response to the global crisis of biodiversity loss by carrying out community-based conservation projects, aiming to protect the environment through local, community-based conservation, scientific research, and environmental education.
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