Running Strong

Random thoughts about life and following Christ

Things Are Not What They Seem…

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What do all the great stories and myths tell us? What do they have in common? What are they trying to get across?

Wherever they may come from, whatever their shape might be, they nearly always speak to us Three Eternal Truths.

These stories are trying to remind us that things are not what they seem. There is a whole lot more going on here than meets the eye. Much more.

After the tornado sets her down, Dorothy wakes and steps out of her old farmhouse to find herself in a strange new world, a land of Munchkins and fairies and wicked witches. The Land of Oz. How brilliant for the filmmakers to have waited for this moment to introduce color in the movie. Up till now the story has been told in black and white; when Dorothy steps out of the house, the screen explodes in color, and she whispers to her little friend, Toto . . . I don’t think we’re in Kansas anymore.

Neo is awakened from the death-sleep of the Matrix to discover that the time is not 1999, but 2199, and the world the thought was real is actually a massive deception cast upon the human race to keep them prisoners.

Jacob falls into a dream under the desert stars and sees a ladder resting on the earth, with its top reaching to heaven, and the angels of God… ascending and descending on it (Gen. 28:12). He wakes, more awake than he’s ever been in his life, thanks to the dream, and realizes for the first time hat there is more going on around him than he ever imagined. Surely the Lord is in this place, and I was not aware of it (Gen 28:16).

And I was not aware of it. Isn’t this the very lesson of the Emmaus Road? You recall the story—two followers of Christ are headed out of town after the Crucifixion, as dejected as two people can be, with every reason in their minds to be so and more. Their hopes have been shattered. They staked it all on the Nazarene, and now he’s dead. As they slump back toward their homes, Jesus sort of sneaks up alongside, very much alive but incognito, and joins their conversation, feigning ignorance—and they not seeing it is him.

Why do you suppose God gave us this story?

Might it have been to remind us things are not what they seem? That our interpretation of events may be more than a little off? If we’ll start there, with a little humility, then we, too, might move on to have our eyes opened to the rest of the story in our lives. There is more going on here than we imagined.

We live in two worlds—or better, in one world with two parts, one part that we can see and one part that we cannot. We are urged, for our own welfare, to act as though the unseen world (the rest of reality) is, in fact, more weighty and more real and more dangerous than the part of reality we can see.

The lesson from the story of the Emmaus Road—the lesson the whole Bible is trying to get across—begins with this simple truth: There is more going on here than meets the eye. Far more.

That is Eternal Truth Number One.

(Waking the Dead by John Eldredge, p. 26–27, 29)

Written by Bob

June 3, 2008 at 9:46 am

Posted in Waking the Dead

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