Richard Rohr, Poe: Seeing
“Most people do not see things as they are because they see things as they are!” Which is not to see at all. Their many self-created filters keep them from seeing with any clear vision.”
— Richard Rohr, Center for Action and Contemplation, daily Rohr Meditation.
Edgar Allan Poe also gives us more clues about seeing in “The Purloined Letter.” The Paris chief of police asks a famous amateur detective, C. Auguste Dupin, to help him find a letter stolen from the boudoir of an unnamed woman by an unscrupulous minister who is blackmailing his victim. The chief of police and his detectives have combed the hotel where the minister lives, behind the wallpaper, under the carpets, examining tables and chairs with microscopes, probing cushions with needles, and found no sign of the letter. Dupin gets a detailed description of the letter, visits the minister at his hotel, complaining of weak eyes, wearing green spectacles, so he can disguise his eyes as he searches for the note. Finally, he sees it in plain sight, in a cheap card rack hanging from a dirty ribbon. He leaves a snuff box behind as an excuse to return the next day and switches out the letter for a duplicate.
Rohr is calling us to put on a new pair of glasses, perhaps 3-D glasses, to see the depth of what is in plain sight immediately around us in the present moment.
This is why we are called to community. This is why we have spiritual friends and guides or directors.
Our community and guides help us meet God in the present moment.
We hear this call to God in the present moment, especially in Epiphany.
Epiphany means an illuminating realization.
This is the call of our current season of Epiphany.
Joanna joannaseibert.com