The other day, early in the morning, I noticed my orange cat, Loki, sitting by the back door staring out the window. He isn’t the talker that Pippin is. Pippin will chortle and chirp at chipmunks, squirrels and birds. But one thing Pippin and Loki are silent for is deer.
“Whatcha see?” I asked Loki as I walked to the back door. Loki glanced at me over his shoulder and then
returned to the window.
Sure enough, there in the back yard, with just her head and
neck showing from behind my car was a deer.
I assumed that it was the same deer I had seen in my yard almost every
day for the past few weeks. It is still
strange to me that there are deer here so close to the city. I’m not downtown, but it’s definitely an
urban environment.
The other day, when I left for church, and turned around to
lock the back door and when I did I startled a deer I didn’t even know was
there. I jumped as suddenly there was an
explosion of rat-tat-tat-tat, as the deer’s hooves made contact with the
pavement as she leapt from the grass.
Whirling around, I caught sight of the deer who then froze
at the sight of me.
I froze too.
And we both just stood there, until finally I dared to
breathe and the deer took off, leaping again over the neighbor’s fence.
Looking back at my interactions with the deer those couple
of weeks, she seemed more jumpy and skittish than I have seen before in neighborhood
deer. And as it turned out, there was a
reason for that.
That morning I spotted Loki by the window, the second I
stepped to the window, the deer noticed me.
She stopped and stared right at me.
I took a step back from the window, hoping somehow I would just
vanish, but she continued to watch even as I took another step back and reached
for my camera.
(I am smart enough now to keep a camera by the back door.)
Still she refused to look away.
I slowly raised the camera to my eye and zoomed in as best I
could through a dirty window.
I always have my camera set to bird mode, so that it takes a
series of rapid fire pictures and I sound like the paparazzi outside some celebrity’s
house.
Still the deer didn’t move.
I held my breath and prepared for another series of pictures
when I saw something move just out of sight of my camera lens.
And then I gasped.
A small fawn had emerged from around the front of the car.
Knobby knees and speckled, still young enough to wobble,
still fresh birth thin. I could see the
fawn’s ribs.
I had gasped when the fawn stepped out and I hadn’t taken
another breath.
Isn’t it funny what makes us gasp?
In the hospital, when the surgeon wanted to see if it was
truly my gallbladder that was inflamed, she took the knuckle of her index
finger and dug it in up under my ribs on the right side.
The pain was so intense, I gasped.
We gasp when we are in pain.
We gasp in fear.
We also gasp in shock, both good and bad.
We gasp in awe.
That little fawn was so precious and so beautiful and so
new, I gasped as I felt my heart grow large in love for God’s creation.
The mama deer had not stopped looking at me and even though
I was no threat, when I finally did breathe and let the camera slide down, both
mama deer and fawn took off down the alley.
I ran through the house, to the front door and opened it
just in time to see the two deer fleeing across my small street and into the
neighbor’s yard.
In the dew-laden grass, the fawn did not step as her mother
stepped. The fawn leapt. She danced.
She bucked. And dare I say that
if fawns laugh, they do it through their feet.
There was so much joy in the fawn.
The mother was scared and protective of her child.
But the child had no idea.
She only knew that there was so much of everything, of space, of air, of
smells of grass and trees with bark still spongey from last night’s rain.
I thought of last week’s reading of Jesus saying how we must
be like the little children to enter the Kingdom of God and woe … woe to anyone
who places a stumbling block in front of one of these children.
As I watched that little fawn, for a moment, I understood the
protectiveness that God has for all of us.
We are all His children. Because
as I watched that fawn, I thought I would do anything to protect her. I ached worrying about her safety with so
many cars around.
Imagine, if you can feel this way about a wild animal, how
much more does God love you? How much
more does God delight in you? How much joy
do you bring God when you dance, when you laugh?
God loves everything about you.
You breathe. God
loves.
Your heart beats. God
loves.
You smile. God loves.
Remember that. We are
all newborn fawns to God.
Amen.