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22/03/2021

Spiritual reflection to start the day with the Rev Dr Alison Jack of New College, Edinburgh

2 minutes

Last on

Mon 22 Mar 2021 05:43

Script

Good morning.

To 鈥榣ook鈥, to 鈥榮ee鈥 and to 鈥榞aze鈥 at something all have subtly different connotations. To 鈥榞aze鈥 is to rest one鈥檚 eyes on an object with an intensity that 鈥榣ooking鈥 doesn鈥檛 quite capture. The notion of the gaze has been theorised in various ways. The gaze may imply an unhealthy power dynamic between the gazer and the gazed upon. Or it may simply refer to the steady and deliberate action of the eyes and the mind which reaches out towards what鈥檚 before them.

Antoine de Saint-Exupry is most famous now, perhaps, for his children鈥檚 tale The Little Prince. But in his book about the early days of aviation, Airman鈥檚 Odyssey, he writes about love in terms of mutual gazing. Here he asserts that 鈥淟ove does not consist of gazing at each other, but in looking outward together in the same direction.鈥 By lifting the gaze from the object of love to a shared horizon, Saint-Exup茅ry shifts what could be a closed, contained, oppressive connection to one which is mutually purposeful and open to a shared future. The context is romantic love, but the shared outward gaze is a strong metaphor for relationships of different sorts. The famously small man in the New Testament, Zacchaeus, climbed the tree because he wanted to see Jesus. Jesus in the story looks up and sees him, and that moment of visual connection ultimately leads to a new and outward-looking way of life for Zacchaeus. A change of perspective which affects the whole way he leads his life, begun with a gaze.

Loving God, lift our eyes to gaze on that which is true and noble and right, and to seek out those who share our vision. Amen.

Broadcast

  • Mon 22 Mar 2021 05:43

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