It’s been a
long time since I’ve written anything here. That doesn’t mean that I haven’t
been thinking, although some might argue that fact. It’s really that my life
has been kind of a kaleidoscope of late. Colors and patterns have been swirling
around and have refused to settle on one identifying system.
I’ve
relocated to the city of Athens, GA, home of R.E.M. and the B52s. It’s a place
to get great burgers and to wonder why they refuse to spell the word “dog”
correctly, preferring “Dawg.” At any rate
this process of changing jobs, buying and selling homes and learning where
things are have kept me occupied.
I’ve discovered, though, that I cannot keep
my own thoughts at bay for very long. Ideas keep cropping up. Some of them are
new. Some of them are old, returning once again as if to say “You haven’t
finished with us yet. We’re not finished with you either. Deal with it.” My
thoughts don’t seem to respect me very much.
The other
night, I was listening to music and heard a song that I had not listened to in
a while - Leonard Cohen’s “Hallelujah.” I love it. I can’t really explain to
anyone’s satisfaction why I love it but I do. I love the simplicity of the
melody and chord progression. I love the lyrics that touch on so many religious
images and are at the same time so very human. I love the way other artists
have taken Cohen’s song and made it their own. I love the way “Hallelujah”
seems to invite us to make it our own, whether we sing it or
simply allow it to wash over us, taking us to places inside ourselves that
perhaps we’ve never visited before.
Most of all,
I love the way the song invites us, entreats us and dares us to live the one
word chorus, “hallelujah, hallelujah.” After each verse that shows a picture of
someone who is broken or lonely or confused, comes the chorus again.
“Hallelujah, hallelujah.” That doesn’t mean that all is well and everyone is
happy. Sometimes, as Cohen says, “It’s not somebody that’s seen the light. It’s
a cold and it’s a broken hallelujah.”
I get it.
There have been times in my life that “hallelujah” has been the farthest word
from my lips. There have been times that I didn’t feel joyous, or happy or
blessed and I just didn’t want to “Praise Ye the Lord” as the translation goes.
I didn’t understand that when human beings speak the word, the word can be a
supplication and a plea as well as an exclamation.
Sometimes words fail me.
Sometimes I just don’t know what to say or how to say it. Sometimes I can only
feel. In those times it is permissible to whisper “hallelujah” in a way that is
a plea or a prayer. “Hallelujah” because I hurt too much for anything else.
“Hallelujah” because it’s the only coherent thing I can say. “Hallelujah” just
because.
In one of
his verses, Cohen says that “There’s a blaze of light in every word. It doesn’t
matter which you’ve heard, the holy or the broken hallelujah.” He is right.
However we feel it, what matters is that we say it at all. I would even say
that a broken hallelujah is just as holy as any other, perhaps more so. The
broken hallelujah, for me, is the moment when I have run out of words. I can
only speak in tears. The only word is “hallelujah,” perhaps preceded by “please,
please, please.”
The final
verse of Cohen’s song is one that has rarely been recorded by others, for
whatever reason. It’s the verse that ties it all together for me.
I did my best, it wasn't much
I couldn't feel, so I tried to touch
I've told the truth, I didn't come to fool you
And even though it all went wrong
I'll stand before the Lord of Song
With nothing on my tongue but Hallelujah
There will
come a time when all I can say is that I did my best and sometimes my best
wasn’t much. I made mistakes. Sometimes I screwed up royally. Other times I
came through victoriously, banners flying. Life went wrong and life went right.
Standing before the Lord of Song, the only thing that I will be able to say –
in a whispered plea as well as in celebration – will be “hallelujah.”
I hope that will be enough.