In a friend’s blog and in response to an on-going exchange about living in the USA versus elsewhere (see the replies to his [Thursday, Nov. 29, 2007][1] entry), I made the following comment:
That was written in a nearly in a stream-of-consciousness manner; the words just came spilling out with very little editing.
What matters in this are not the words but rather what drives the words. And what drove this was feeling, a gut feeling about the sanctity of life, about our nature and the reason for our being.
Some might say I’ve been lucky to have travelled to many places in the world. Others would say it’s a blessing. But I believe it has been a God-sent education.
In one of the rooms of our house is a small frame hanging on the wall. Therein is a neatly calligraphied statement:
“Life is not a rehearsal.”
Whenever I see it I say to myself, “That’s right. It’s not a rehearsal, it’s a tryout.”
Fortunately, this “tryout” (for what comes after) comes, at least for me, with an education and the travels I have made, whether overseas or to the corner supermarket, are part of that.
Many of the important lessons were learned by walking foreign streets and alleys and watching people where they live.
I’ve seen individuals and families around the world, good people and bad, good parents and bad and, through their similarities and their differences, I’ve learned things about myself, about others. And after a lot of chewing on the ideas, talking with others and lots and lots of reading about God and about life, about why we are here, animate and with the ability to think, choose and do, I’m convinced of a couple of things.
Life is Holy.
It is a gift.
We are granted Free Will.
Some take that Free Will and go in one direction. We are, indeed, permitted to waste our lives, to destroy ourselves and to poison future generations, even to exterminate all life on our planet. It is permitted.
But that is not what is hoped.
Instead, I am utterly convinced that God hopes we will cherish life, encourage it, embellish it.
Life is to be lived, and enjoyed, and in ways that promote it.
But we do have to choose to make it that way.
When I learn of what is happening in the world, I am sometimes terrified of this gift of Free Will. But I know that the destruction of life, while enabled by Free Will, is not the Lord’s hope nor wish.
We can choose to act, or not act, to the promotion or to the diminuation of life. The Lord, if asked, may also choose to act and, perhaps, answer those prayers.
But it is our Free Will, acted upon from moment to moment, that shapes the world of humanity. It is His Will that we be free to choose.
In my travels, I have discovered that I live in the world of humanity where we make choices, perform actions and directly and indirectly, in large and small parts, affect each other.
To an extent that sometimes seems very, very small to me, the current state of the world, at least one small corner of it, is my doing. And to an extent I cannot possibly fathom, the future state of the world is also, to some extent, the product of my doing through my actions, through my contacts with others, through my actions or lack of actions, with total strangers walking past me in the old or the new airport in Shanghai, across the counter at MacDonalds, or within my loving arms.
God help us, please. It’s hard and confusing. The simple, straight-forward answers you have provided us through your Son are so often drowned out by the complex din of the world. Please let me hear your words again, show me the opportunities that arise before me, help me discover the ways in which I can further your hopes, wishes, dreams and desires this day, this hour and this minute.