Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Dorothy L. Sayers on the Kingdom of Heaven


         The Kingdom of Heaven,” said the Lord Christ, “is among you.  But what, precisely, is the Kingdom of Heaven?  You cannot point to existing specimens, saying ‘Lo, here!’ or ‘Lo, there!’  You can only experience it.  But what is it like, so that we may recognize it?  Well, it is a change, like being born again and re-learning everything from the start.  It is a secret, living power – like yeast.  It is something that grows, like seed.  It is precious like buried treasure, like rich pearl, and you have to pay for it.  It is a sharp cleavage through the rich jumble of things which life presents:  like fish and rubbish in a draw–net, like wheat and tares; like wisdom and folly; and it carries with it a kind of menacing finality; it is new, yet in a sense it was always there – like turning out a cupboard and finding there your own childhood as well as your present self; it makes demands, it is like an invitation to a royal banquet – gratifying, but not to be disregarded, and you have to live up to it; where it is equal, it seems unjust, where it is just it is clearly not equal – as with the single pound, the diverse talents, the laborers in the vineyard, you have what you bargained for; it knows no compromises between an uncalculating mercy and terrible justice – like the unmerciful servant, you get what you give; it is helpless in your hands like the King’s Son, but if you slay it, it will judge you; it was from the foundations of the world; it is to come; it is here and now; it is within you.  It is recorded that the multitudes sometimes failed to understand.”

Dorothy L. Sayers, The Poetry of Search and the Poetry of Statement, p. 281 

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