On Play 07/11/2016 Children are masters of play; they lose themselves in their games, making the most of their moments and eluding distraction (and when distraction does come, they dive right in). Thus children are close to God—it is easier for them to see his glory, and they have not yet fallen, at least not completely or so significantly, into the blindness of which the “ordinary” and “accustomed” are symptoms. The ordinary moments or plainness of life cannot lead to blindness (via boredom) because if you are
Children are masters of play; they lose themselves in their games, making the most of their moments and eluding distraction (and when distraction does come, they dive right in). Thus children are close to God—it is easier for them to see his glory, and they have not yet fallen, at least not completely or so significantly, into the blindness of which the “ordinary” and “accustomed” are symptoms. The ordinary moments or plainness of life cannot lead to blindness (via boredom) because if you are