By Noël Russell
I’ve never really known how to pray.
Raised wearing Sunday best, taught to kneel, heads bowed, hands up, we would enter service in the shadows of magnificent cathedrals—where worthy men ushered us beneath ornately painted arches.
The preacher would speak in eloquent invocations that echoed off gilded walls, and anoint our heads with Holy Water. Reverent priests broke bread as ornate depictions of the Divine hung high above us cloaked in white and so far out of reach. In that sacred space, we were commanded to righteousness, compelled to atonement, and pressured on presentation and performance. Achievement was announced by invitation to participate; many were cast aside.
Church was the place where people came to meet God. But I was doubting, angsty, and a little wild—so when I left home, I left church behind too, vowing to never again enter those stained-glass structures with towering walls.
These days, I’m married to a minister. And even though I deeply value the truths which I was raised with, I’ve yet to find myself spiritually at home in an institution where many aren’t welcome. Those sanctuaries seem to provide no real sanctuary at all.
Still, these days, I feel more spiritually connected than ever before, because I’ve found my communion table laid out in the wild— rivers overflowing, beckoning our bodies to wade in and be refreshed, pews of fallen logs calling for all to rest their weary limbs for a while, an abundance of songs—bubbling laughter and the call of cliff swallows—echoing off the canyon walls.
Just the other day, someone asked if I attended church, and I answered yes. Because last Sunday, I walked in the shadows of magnificent granite cathedrals while soaring ravens ushered me beneath patinaed arches. I doused my body in holy spring water, broke bread in front of a glowing campfire. I read words of redemption on leaves and flowers, in the stars and storm clouds.
So, each Sunday, I visit the place where people have come to meet God for ages. My spirit is moved by celestial sounds of roaring cascades, and I find Heaven reflected in glassy creek beds.
Here, there is no place for righteousness or atonement, no pressure on presentation, no need to perform. At this church, all are embraced by grace because there are no outsiders, outside.
I still may not really know how to pray, but:
When I breathe in deep and fill my belly up with air,
When I wade in the creek, lay beside the sea, and paddle beneath towering granite monoliths sparkling gold in the morning light,
When I lean my head out the window and let my hair ride the wind waves on the long drive home,
These are the sacred moments when something sublime moves through me.
And, as I stand beneath the pine trees and hear the breeze whoosh through their needle-draped bows, I wonder if all my years of reaching for words of worship have been in vain. Because, is there really any way to utter words of praise that sound as beautiful as this?
Photos courtesy of Noël Russell.
Noël is a first generation American, a part time vanlifer, a full time fun-haver, and a member of the She Explores team. Whether for work or for play, you’ll often find her, her husband, and their two rescue mutts traveling around the Sierra Nevada in their converted Econoline, named Francis Ford Campola. Learn more about her at noelruss.com and find her on Instagram.
Noël, Your elegance in communicating your spiritual truths struck a chord with me. I infinitely dabble with a poem (below) that I hope demonstrates that chord. It’s really more of an ongoing meditation, and a way of honoring the authors, friends, teachers who have taught me. I will continue to watch these spaces on she-explores.
Many thanks,
Cynthia
Patterns
You beckon and point
Seals answer at lighthouse rocks
Horseshoe crabs alert
Trickster-painted turtle bellies brighten
Crane choruses regale their domain
You know how long.
Winds sculpt high plain mesas
Florescence rims dark shores
Rocks layer evolutionary verses
Dormant craters encircle ancient stars
You know how, why.
To those who see
patterns revealed
a priori angles mirroring the sacred
paralleling neural paths
You know the plan
that designs the eternal
for eyes that dare see
imbuing reverence
that no harm be done
relentless patterns
undaunted, seed to blossom
like your beckoning
to seek and wonder
Bird, beast, rock, shell, bower
Lost on those dazzled by toys
Bought and sold, dug and quarried
for gilded mansions
framed glass views
for private musing or gain
Walking dead scrape the land
not knowing layers
till compost themselves
Consuming, storing, captive to affluence
You know
These shallow winnings
these false temples, whimper
in the face of ravishing Nature,
the one true church