June 01, 2026

Longing for Beauty by Lorrie Orr

 

June 2026: Writing as beauty. In his book Beauty: The Invisible Embrace, John O'Donahue writes "to participate in beauty is to come into the presence of the Holy." What does creating beauty mean to you and your writing? How have you sensed God's Holy Spirit filling you as he did Bezalel and Oholiab in Exodus 35:30-35?




Beauty is God's invitation to delight in him.
Wonder and awe whisper to us that there is
something beyond, something more.
Steve DeWitt, (Eyes Wide Open)


It's Sunday evening, May 31. Sunlight streams through the window onto the vase of peonies on the dining room table. How beautiful it is. I fill my eyes with the extravagantly ruffled pink and white blossoms while my mind ponders the question of beauty, and the fast-approaching deadline for this post. I had thought this would be an easy post to write, but instead, I've found the topic so vast that it's hard to pull something coherent together.

I have always been appreciative of beautiful things in the world, but it is only in the past few years that I've come to realize that embracing beauty is a personal core value - something that is important to me and that acts as a guiding principle in my life.

When I attended a concert in La Sainte Chapelle in Paris years ago, I marveled at the exquisite beauty of the chapel expressed through architecture, glass, stone, and paint. The music that soared upwards to the curving arches and filled every nook and cranny of the space was equally beautiful. Creative expression is a reminder to me of one way that humans are created in the image of God.
 
The books or the music in which we thought the beauty was located
will betray us if we trust to them; it was not in them, it only came
through them, and what came through them was longing...
For they are not the thing itself; they are only the scent of a flower
we have not found, the echo of a tune we have not heard,
news from a country we have not yet visited.
C. S. Lewis (The Weight of Glory)

This ache of beauty, this longing I feel, reminds me that I am a spiritual being with a desire for something beyond myself, for that which is greater, for God himself. The Psalmist longs to "gaze upon the beauty of the Lord" throughout his life. The beauty of this world is a reflection of ultimate beauty, of God himself. More than an aesthetic quality, beauty has the most impact on me when I recognize God's presence in the things I experience.

In L. M. Montgomery's The Blue Castle, Barney says "There are so many kinds of loveliness." Beauty comes in myriad forms and I am glad that the Apostle Paul encourages us to think about lovely things. Beauty is multi-sensory, not just the things we see or hear. Human interactions such as watching a mother with her young baby, or cars pulling to the side of the road to let an ambulance by, or a conversation with a grandchild - all of these things, and so much more, are experiences of beauty.

Beauty does not erase the brokenness of this world, but something in me was created to absorb beauty and to recognize its divine source. As a writer, I long for my words to point to the beautiful grace and goodness of God. The goal of beautiful writing is to make the reader feel some emotion. Even when my writing is not explicitly spiritual, when someone reads my words and discovers a longing they cannot perhaps explain, that is beauty.



Lorrie Orr writes from Vancouver Island.
Her first book, Life is Short but Wide, a memoir of 21 years
in Ecuador, was recently published.

More of her writing can be found at 





3 comments:

  1. Exquisitely said, Lorrie. And I'm especially drawn this morning to this line: "As a writer, I long for my words to point to the beautiful grace and goodness of God." Amen. Thank you!

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  2. Linda Joncas8:23 am GMT-7

    Spot on Lorrie. My photographer friend, Ronda, taught me, with her photos, to stop and look and see what I formerly walked right by. Now, the feathered beauty of the peonies you described or a bee on a blossom or a child in a stroller captures me turning my smile into joy bubbles! That’s the Lord’s refreshing.
    Thanks for your thoughtful pen to paper beauty inspired piece.

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    Replies
    1. Linda, I love you pointing out that those moments when we see and experience beauty are 'the Lord's refreshing'. Oh yes, I have experienced those moments many times in my life.

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