5-4-2021
A
couple of thoughts tease my mind as I sit to write. It’s “Star Wars” day. How did
a fun, fresh science fiction movie become the mythic, entertainment behemoth that
it is? Fans exchange knowing winks as
they proudly say, “May the 4th be with you!” They delight in the ignorance of the uninitiated
who don’t understand “the force.”
This
is all fantasy, but like a lot of fictional world, Star Wars holds a firm grip
on the hearts of many in the world. What
do witnesses sharing testimony about Jesus have to say to the voters, lawyers,
dishwashers, bus-riders, builders, writers, wannabe-writers, gamers, and influencers
inhabiting the Star Wars universe?
The
other musing poking around my brain is the movement related to COVID-19:
vaccines are up; infection rates are down; restrictions are being lifted. In the U.S., we are inching toward the end of
the pandemic. Of course, just as some at
the beach go charging into the surf, and others gradually dip their toes and
venture no farther than ankle deep, and others stay completely dry settling for
sand and sun, we will see varying levels of social engagement that mark the end
of the COVID-19 ordeal.
Some will
continue to isolate. Some will come out
but stay protected by masks and will find themselves wary about handshaking. Some will bound out into the world and act
gregarious, ignoring the personal space of others, and acting as if COVID-19
never happened. What word do Christ-followers have to share in this disordered,
unbalanced time? And how do we share it?
Sorry, I
don’t have answers, per se. When
COVID-19 is completely in the rearview mirror, there will be other crises
ignored by some and completely feared by others. There will be numerous fantasy worlds that
give people joy and even meaning. We who
follow Jesus are called to show the world who He is and why He matters, and we’re
called to do that no matter how things are in the world.
Ephesians
1:18 says one of the goals of this letter is that the reader will receive the
Spirit and know the hope to which Christians are called. Believers often talk about, write about, and
debate about “the elect.” Who’s included
in “the elect?” Who’s excluded? Am I among “the elect?” What if, instead of these conversations about
something utterly out of our control, we see ourselves as the called.
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