Witness to the Resurrection
Light has been architecturalized in many ways in shaping sacred space and invoking the ineffable. Diana Eck I am sharing something I wrote following the funeral for my daughter in law's grandfather. I was tremendously moved by the service, its beauty, its grace, its hope. I also found myself gathering my own memories of loved ones and dropping down to another level of glorious grief, embracing the sadness as well as the joy. The experience seemed to be magnified by entering some fuller sense of being a witness to a Mystery filled with love and promise. To witness it to engage in a kind of seeing or perceiving, often ineffable. To witness as in this service was indeed to apprehend a sacred space, transformed by all the elements of prayer, music, memory and benediction. It was also to appreciate the role of the architecture: those floor to ceiling windows which caused the outside to come in and the internal to go forth. So I am still pondering the word Witness and t...