The components of gratitude and truth, love and hope bring the realization of wonder. The disciplines of study, of reading and reflecting, of dialoguing in depth and praying with belief sustain the wonder. In short, wonder is captured in one word--worship. When we have learned what worship is, we have experienced what wonder is. Worship is a personal thing before it goes public. It is an individual thing before it is a part of a community. It is a disciplined thing before it is natural.
In that sense, worship is not only a science in that there is discipline to it, but worship is an art in that there is beauty to it. For here the emotion, propelled by the will, touches deep into the imagination to lift the spirit into the very presence of God. On our journey to the home of our Father, He has given us the map and shown us what it will cost. There is a language to it, there are boundaries for it, and there is danger in it. The recognition that though some days will be hard and painful and other days will be joyous and delightful, all are part of the same journey. We must keep our eye on Him and the delight of reunion with Him, bearing the good with the hard and accepting all as real, but letting none diminish the grand, ultimate sight and sound of His presence. If we are to sing in the company of those who have found wonder through worship, we must be girded by the sword of His Word, be guided by the great ones who have walked this way before, and be patient in knowing that the journey is long and will not be accomplished in a day. But if the feet and the head are facing in the same direction, the emotions will follow as well.
God is like the light. Wonder is like the shadow. If you chase the shadow you will never catch up to it. It might even disappear. If you walk toward the light, the shadow will always pursue you. That is when the heart sings with gladness:
'Surely goodness and mercy will follow me
all the days, all the days of my life.' (John W. Peterson, "Surely Goodness and Mercy.") (164-165)
These three paragraphs summarize what took place in the book. I'm tempted to just quickly finish this review so I can move on to the next thing. After finishing "Gods at War" by Kyle Idleman, I am reminded of how the god of achievement keeps knocking on my door. I want to answer it again, and again, and again. But I can't allow myself to do that. The wonder is knocking too. I just read some absolutely incredible things! I can't just move on to the next thing so quickly. I am constrained to go and worship and pray.
I will finish with 2 quotes that have really challenged me (there are SO many others though lol):
'Thinking is a dying discipline in a society that throbs with activity.'
'If a follower of Jesus does not mature in his or her reading, the church could end up running the biggest nursery in the world.'