Pitch perfect

Everyone in the concert hall, including the
orchestra, waits for my daughter to play a single note. In
fact, the concert can’t begin without her.
She’s that important.
She is, after all, the
oboe. And the oboe tunes all the other
instruments.
Being parents of four
children who played in orchestras and bands, my wife and I are accomplished
concert-goers. And we eagerly hope for
just one solo – even a single phrase – so we can give each other the
“that’s-our-kid” glance. So it’s satisfying
to start the concert with our daughter’s playing, even if it is a rather
one-note performance.
As I listen to the
concert unfold, I find the sweeping beauty of the music pulling my thoughts and
emotions toward the Lord. Over the
years, I’ve learned to let the moods of the compositions be auditory reminders
of various facets of God’s character – his tenderness in the swelling melodies,
his grandeur and greatness in the thunderous passages. Listening to a concert of instrumental music
can be a time of worship that draws from deeper than just pure intellect.
And none of that
beautiful performance would be possible if the instruments hadn’t first been
aligned.
Praise is the note that tunes us. No matter who we are. Or where. Regardless of our situation. When we contemplate on the character of God
and give words to a response (even if those words aren’t spoken aloud), we
realign our hearts to the true pitch.
Psalm 147:1 describes
how we are made for praise:
Praise the LORD!
For it is good to sing praises to
our God;
for it is pleasant, and
a song of praise is fitting. (ESV)
Praise is
“fitting.” It’s our home base, our
default mode, in this world and the next.
Charles Spurgeon said, “Praise is the rehearsal of our eternal song.”
This tuning is not a once-and-done thing. Throughout the concert, the orchestra would
pause and Grace would sound her note again.
Again, the strings, woodwinds and brass would give voice, to check the
trueness of their instruments.
We, too, need regular
check-ins. Prone
to wander, Lord, I feel it; prone to leave the God I love, says the old
hymn. We need, throughout each day, to
match the alignment of our hearts to that of the Master.
Only then can our performances
be in perfect harmony.
God, you are worthy of all
praise, glory and honor. And only you
would think to embed in the giving of praise a blessing in return – making our
honoring of you feel like home to our hearts.
Bring us back to that note again and again.
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