DISSOLVE INTO IT
The late Pianist
Sviatoslav Richter explained his approach to playing music as being an
‘executant, carrying out the composer's intentions to the letter. He doesn't
add anything that isn't already in the work. If he is talented, he allows us to
glimpse the truth of the work that is in itself a thing of genius and that is
reflected in him. He shouldn't dominate the music, but should dissolve into
it.’
I found these
astonishing words because they explain how we are part of a reality that is
much greater than we are but at the same time we each have our own
individuality, enabling us to contribute to that great reality. The ancient Greeks puzzled over the question
of the ‘one and the many’. In what sense are we just ‘one of the masses’, a
brick in a wall indistinguishable from any other brick? And in what sense are we
unique with our own indispensable contribution so that if we are not there the
wall is incomplete?
I am always
amazed by the gospel stories. Jesus is never impressed by numbers – even when
there were so many they were ‘trampling on one another’ (Lk 12:1). The
overwhelming impression is of relating to one person at a time; Peter,
Nicodemus, Mary Magdalene, the woman at the well, Zacchaeus. It is the same when
we come to the resurrection stories. Again it is Mary at the tomb. Or the two
going to Emmaus or Thomas. It is an essential of the Christian message that
each person is unique to God and that he loves each person individually and
eternally.
At the same
time the witness of the mystics is that the more a person comes close to God
they more they feel the draw to be ‘dissolved’ into the divine. They leave to
one side, for example, the desire of what Claire Gilbert, in a recent issue of
the Tablet calls, ‘pride in achievement.’ In other words, they leave
behind any desire to be known or celebrated for ‘what I have done.’ They loathe
the idea of drawing attention to themselves. They come into this world, make
their contribution and go – a bit like Anna in the temple (Lk 2:36). No fuss,
no fame.
Such people, as
Richter and Anna, point the way to the beautiful harmony that must exist
between the one and many. The one is for the many and the many are for the one.
If we could live this balance, what a beautiful world we would have! It would
be heaven.
23 April 2023 Easter 3A Acts 2:22-33 1 Pet
1:17-21 Lk 24:13-35
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