Stanley meeting Livingstone in...
Illustration
Stanley meeting Livingstone in the African wild; Romeo sweeping an adolescent Aphrodite called Juliet into his arms for the first time; Gilbert matching his words with Sullivan's inimitable music; Mason and Dixon joining forces; Billy Martin and George Steinbrenner burying the hatchet after months of taciturn silence. Meetings. "I-Thou" relationships to use the terminology of Martin Buber. Where, in all of literature, is there such a significant meeting as between God and Moses recorded in Exodus 3?
Lewis Joseph Sherrill shared his profound insight into the symbolism of this encounter when he titled one of his chapters, "The Burning Bush," in his The Struggle of the Soul. Sherrill notes:
"What is the Burning Bush? It may be one of many things that will not fit the view of life which one has worked out by middle age. It is, for example, monotony when one had reckoned on a life filled with interesting experiences, or it is catastrophe ... or it is adversity when one has counted on comfort, or it is discovering to one's dismay that the self does not fit the role into which it has been drawn. Or it is discovering that God as He is does not fit the neat theology we had constructed ... the basic question which confronts us in the Burning Bush is this: is one ready as yet to know God as He is?"
Lewis Joseph Sherrill, The Struggle of the Soul, Macmillan Co., New York, 1951, p. 187.
