When I was
a child, family vacations usually ended up in the vicinity of the Smoky
Mountains. Even when primary destinations were North Carolina or Washington,
D.C., somehow my parents would work the routes so that we would stop for at
least a few nights in Gatlinburg, Tennessee, with drives through the Smoky
Mountains National Park. Gatlinburg was a tourist town even then, but it looked
radically different from what it does today.
A native
of flatland New Orleans, my mother loved the mountains. And every trip we made,
she could be counted on for saying “You feel closer to God in the mountains.” It
wasn’t for reasons of altitude. It was because of the quiet and majesty of the
mountains, the sounds of the roadside rivers and streams, and the sheer
splendor of nature.
For writer
Kaitlin Curtice, you don’t have to
go to the mountains to find and experience the divine. In Glory
Happening: Finding the Divine in Everyday Places, Curtice finds grace
and glory in the everyday and the mundane.
A card game.
A cave. A lost dog. A garden. Goats and chickens. Friends. A blood transfusion.
A child with leukemia. Seedlings. Hunger. A theft of a laptop computer. Simple
things. Obvious things. The things of everyday life.
Part
memoir, part observation, and part prayer, Curtice has assembled 50 short reflections,
each marked by a quiet simplicity. She brings the close eye of the writer, not
the professional observer or watcher, but the writer who pauses, looks, sees, considers,
and understands. She sees just enough, and provides a glimpse of the divine.
Her response is prayer, and each of the 50 writings includes a prayer.
Kaitlin Curtice |
The wonder
is there, she says. Stop long enough to look for it. You’ll find it.
Curtice is
an author, writer, speaker, and worship leader. Her writing focuses on the
intersection of culture and spirituality. She’s writer for Sojourners, Decaturish,
and Red Rising Magazine, among
others. She blogs at her web site.
Glory Happening is an invitation to open your
eyes, look at what surrounds you in your everyday life. You don’t have to
travel to the mountains to find God.
Top photograph by Robert Collins
via Unsplash. Used with permission.
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