Defining
the terms helps us, well me at least, to grasp a little of how they interact
with my mind and pen.
Rite. A formal procedure. A basis for
a ritual, liturgy. A system
Write. Thoughts, dreams, stories,
experiences transferred from mind into print.
Right. A standard for living in
relationships and honouring to God and His word.
In many
ways my rite is affected by my personality and temperament. The procedure I
follow when writing will find itself moulded by who I am. Sure, I can learn
various techniques and helpful facts, but even these will be reshaped by my
rite. What about my faith rite? As I’ve matured (like that better than getting
older) I understand that my faith is governed by God’s word. For I am
unshakeable in my understanding that Jesus is Saviour and Lord and His word is
true.
How do I
know my rite is right? By investigation and research into its foundations. When
questions were raised and doubts aired I sought answers. On the basis of such
scrutiny I made a commitment of my life. As Paul put it ‘I know in whom I have
believed and am persuaded that he is able to keep that which I’ve committed to
him against that day.’ 2 Timothy 1:12. Nearly sixty years have crept up on me
since then and my conviction about my faith rite being right is more
‘watertight’ than ever.
As you
can appreciate, my genre in which I write is either devotional or apologetic
(not to mention sermons and Bible studies). However, the same influence will
permeate your writing style and genre. When we claim Jesus as our Lord and
Saviour He works on us to take the wonder of what He has done from the
conscious to the subconscious. It is from that realm our lives, and therefore
our writings are coloured. To look back over the years of writing should make
it clear how the Lord has impacted us. He refined our personality, reshaped our
words and stories, restored spiritual insight and revitalised our writing.
Light permeates the rite. It then seeps into what we write. We want people who
read the words with which we have wrestled to express what we believe is right to
come into contact with the light of life.
As
Christian writers our calling is to lead our readers from ignorance to truth,
from error to right, from darkness to light. Through your story, you take the
reader through whatever darkness, deceit, danger or doubt your heroes encounter,
into the climax of a faith discovery.
Many
years ago a man, in summing up his story, said to Mary and I “am I right or am
I wrong!” Permit me to use something similar as I conclude. ‘Am I right about what I write from the rite
which lights up my life?’
Nice play on words, Ray, as well as a great article. It's good to reflect on our 'rite of passage' and see where it's taken us :)
ReplyDeleteThanks Andrea. I do like playing with words but then don't all writers. Trust you continue to enjoy being a wordsmith.
Delete