So, Matt and I have this friend, an amazing cook, who came to our house to prepare us a meal some time back. As he adeptly threw together one ingredient after another, he couldn't help but exude with joy over all of the ways that he saw God's goodness. "Lemons," he said; "don't we have a good God...One who would create lemons! They are so perfectly sour and yet you can't eat them without smiling."
And he's right. If you let yourself, you can become downright overwhelmed with the ways God is good, with the ways He has given us pictures of Himself, with life's pleasure that direct us to the giver of all good things! Yes, food was given for sustenance and sunlight for warmth, but there is more...
All creation points to our Creator and as we find pleasure in a good meal or a vibrant sunset we have the opportunity to find pleasure in the God of the Universe (and this is to His glory!) Us humans though, we can distort it...we can either say a that a meal is to meant only to meet our physical needs (although this doesn't quite explain why some foods are so pleasing to the senses!) or we can say that it is in the meal itself that we find ultimate pleasure and in gluttonous pursuit chase one meal after another, but this doesn't stop God from being good and holy and just and full of grace. In our brokenness, we will always take God's good things and distort them more than any carnival mirrors could, but in His grace toward us, God made a way through His Son Jesus Christ to be restored into right relationship with our Creator and a proper relationship with creation. We can sip a glass of lemonade on a hot day and know that it is more than quenching our thirst. It is for God's glory that the lemon is good and it is for His glory that we pleasure in the lemon's Good Creator.
Sunday, June 20, 2010
Saturday, June 12, 2010
Create a better Hollywood, Be a Better Hollywood
I tend to be "one of those people." You know, one of those people who travel through life with an invisible sign reading, "Sure you are a complete stranger, but please tell me your life story while we wait in the check out lane." or "bring on all the 'crazy' you got...I can handle it." I'm not complaining mind you; I love it! I always have new material for more deeply understanding the human experience (and of course adding some humorous experiences of my own). Soon after relocating to Hollywood, Fl I discovered that my local library is practically a breeding ground for such antics. Those that have made the top of the "awkward" list so far would have to be the unprovoked back massage initiated by an elderly woman and, on a separate occasion, being asked if I thought there might be a pool on the second floor of the library because the inquirer was quite sure she smelled chlorine. This past weeks experience though was down right enlightening. You see, my husband and I moved here with a mission: We wanted to know what it would look like for the Gospel of Jesus Christ to saturate downtown Hollywood. We wanted to know what it would look like for a local church to rise up from gospel saturated soil. We wanted to know what it would look like for that local body of believers to bless her city, invest in her city, and intentionally partner with God's mission to renew all things (what can I say, we dream small, right?) In an effort toward this end, we have often asked, "What would make Hollywood a better city?" "What about the city, as it is, should change?" What could we bring to Hollywood to make it a better place? Not that these mental exercises are bad but my recent library visit was a sobering reminder. The encounter went something like this....as I stood in line to return a few items a women came up behind me and loudly stated that she and her twin two-year-olds would be, "going to the Ft. Lauderdale branch from now on!" I gave her a sympathetic look-an apparent invitation to continue- and she said, "the people here are so unfriendly and I can't get any help." Having experienced the same thing on several occasions I quickly suppressed the urge to join in her complaint and simply told her that sometimes you gotta try just coming back, get to know the people. She wasn't convinced. As she approached the counter she asked me if she would be able to use the self check out station. I told her what she would need and then talked her through the process. Nothing monumental, I just showed her how to use a machine. On her way out the door she looked over her shoulder and said, "okay, maybe I will come back, but just for you." And that's when it hit me: to create a better Hollywood I've got to 'be' a better Hollywood. You see, we can and will faithfully preach/share the truth of the gospel. And there are many good things that we can do as a church (and we will probably do them). There are many improvements that could be made in the city (and we will probably partner to see some of those made). But there is no replacement for individuals who intentionally live out the gospel in their context, their routine, their daily grind. So, what I am NOT saying is that the simple act of doing good deeds will make the world a better place. That's simplistic and incomplete; in fact, it misses the gospel altogether. I am saying that when a person has been brought to the end of herself by the knowledge and consequences of her own depravity and by the knowledge of God's absolute purity AND when, in that place, a person experiences the grace of God through His provision of a substitute...when a person knows that she deserves God's wrath, but that it has been satisfied in the person and work of Jesus Christ...well, that changes everything. It changes her thinking, her actions, her attitudes, her relationships, the way she eats, the way she relaxes, the way she creates, the way she checks out books from the library...it changes everything. She doesn't 'do' to earn God's favor she 'is' because of what God has already done. And, I believe, that when she 'is' in Hollywood, by the power of the Gospel, Hollywood will begin to be a better city...a step forward in joining God in His Kingdom work of making all things new.
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