I took a moment looking over the open tables in the shop and then chose my spot. I took my seat at the smallest little table and laid out my things with fingers longing to pour out feelings onto paper, and I stared at the antique piano sitting silent about a yard or so beyond my little table. Its front was scattered with piano music of all kinds. Its top held a vintage lamp, a stack of musty old books and a pot with perky green leaves climbing up out of it and down the piano’s side.
That old piano sat there like it had so much it wanted to say, yet no hands to play, to give their try at what it had the potential to do. I stared at its keys and felt so many things inside, like a silent piano could remind you of the workings of the heart that can feel so many things and yet struggle to discern when to tell what there is to tell, when to hold what there is to hold and how to even step with them both. One of the local librarians walked by with a wave. I waved back, and then I began to pen a tiny letter, a little release to things inside.
Dear hearts that bear this life,
You have so much to say, and sometimes so little to tell.
You have so much to bear with care, and sometimes so much to let loose like a tumble of hair falling down.
And right there as I finished writing the last word of that line, he simply walked in the back door of the place, gave a nod in my direction and then he took up his seat right there at the piano in front of me. My eyes widened at the timing and his heart tumbled out of his fingers. Occasionally, the fingers stumbled, but you could just tell how those fingers were more concerned with letting that piano and his heart join to share a melody than they were with whether it all came out just right.
His playing breathed a most certain kind of life into the place and my own fingers found their pace on the letters of the keyboard. And hearts that find their little ways to tumble out a song, they bring other hearts awake, even when they don’t see it.
He played about twenty minutes and then he got up to head for the door just as quickly as he had come in. And I wanted to say thank you, to give an awkward little clap, from my own stumbling heart, and before I found a response, he was gone. But he left the place with his heart in music form still silently echoing ‘round.
And I could feel it, how just the same way that a smile can be so contagious, a heart that is finding its way to sing out the utter beauty inside of the aching and groaning and longing of life, can be a wondrously contagious thing to other hearts.
Since I didn’t get to thank the pianist, I wanted to pen this down, how it feels. And I thought of you, the musicians, the artists, the poets, the weavers, the designers, the bakers, the makers, and the ones who share their hearts in so many little ways. In the silence there after his music, right there I could feel it in truth. No matter how imperfect the song may feel at times, each time you let it ring with hope, you give timeless gift to the hearts inside us all.
And when you let that song ring out, when you play with faith in the beauty of song itself… a hope for eternity shared with heart… no matter how your fingers stumble, no matter how many only notice the flaws, you are offering the gift of something that each of us forget so many times. We need each other to remember that the song of eternity is what belongs inside of these hearts. And no matter how weak and flawed our humanity is, the song of eternity is a song that each of our hearts are created and able to share by faith as a workmanship of our Father. By grace, it is sure for each and every heart that plays for the simple beauty of song. There will be hearts in need of hearing the song who will be able to hear the sound of that melody beyond the flaws we could put into the music. It doesn’t negate the care we give to song, but it is alive with purpose beyond the inevitable flaws.
When you play for the beauty of the song itself and let it all ring out, you give us the gift of the Good Song that transcends you.
The fragility and scars of hearts grow light in the sound, for we remember we are free to join in the Song so good and beautiful that it never could be ruined by anything in us. Only made full with the sound of all that is being redeemed, faithful grace made perfect through all that is weak.
“But he said to me, ‘My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.’ Therefore I will boast all the more gladly of my weaknesses, so that the power of Christ may rest upon me.” 2 Corinthians 12:9.
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