Tag Archives: Eden

Why the Skull & Crossbones is More “Christian” than “Pirate”

A few years ago I spent a weekend at JPUSA, the community of Christians in Chicago (who host the Cornerstone Festival) who live together in the old Chelsea Hotel and call themselves “Jesus People.” And during my time there, I saw a lot of skulls.

Skulls adorn the hallways, the door frames, and the forearms of the people who inhabit them.  Five doors down from my room there was an unapologetic mural of a skeleton, squarely behind a baby gate and next to a sign that warned in loud purple Crayola, “Nursing Urijiah! Piz come back. ” All over the community, there were instances of this odd juxtaposition of life and death.

I wondered if the skulls were some kind of talisman, like some cultures have to ward off evil spirits, but when I asked one of the women on staff about their significance, she laughed.

“Well,” she said, “People here are kind of obsessed with death.”

She explained to me, “The skulls and skeletons are representative of the knowledge that there’s more.  We anticipate death, in a way, because we are eager for our new bodies and the new life ahead with Christ.  We are living in a dichotomy between this world and the next, and we are very aware of that.”  So there are skulls: a reminder of our mortal decay.  She also told me that people at JPUSA tend to live in the awareness that, in the city, they are surrounded by the living dead.  They are among the spiritually destitute and dying.

I’ve often felt this restlessness, of living in the cracks between Eden and Heaven, which some call the age of the in-between, the already-not-yet of the kingdom.  It can be exasperating: is the kingdom here, or is it to come? Christ has come into our world and has promised victory over sin and death, but we still live under its affects while we wait for His return. And it can make us impatient in the waiting, while we see the world around us in such need of redemption.  We were created for eternal life, to bear divine image and have a face-to-face relationship with our Maker, but sin ruptured this paradise and now we live in the imbalance, caught between what was supposed to be and what is now utterly broken. Even the earth is a victim of this tension, “the whole creation has been groaning together in the pains of childbirth until now” (Romans 8:22).  Even the earth and the roots of mountains straddle this gap between the kingdoms.

There is a dichotomy at hand. We are finite beings with eternal life or death at stake. Perhaps the reminder of our mortal frame, whether skulls and bones or just knowing that there is more to come, can lend urgency to our days to live well, to reach out to the dying, and to eagerly await the life ahead.

How do you navigate this tension in your daily life and work?

Bringing Good Things to Life

This weekend my husband and I went to Agway to pick out our seeds for our vegetable garden. And I have to say, I have never been a tomboy kind of girl, I like my Anthropologie perfume and my dangling earrings, and someone might ask me if I’m lost if I wandered around too long in a place that specializes in mulch and mowers. But I LOVE Agway. Because I love the idea of cultivating something small and good and bringing it to life.

I am a gardening novice. Last year was our first try. We planted the heirloom tomato seeds my sister gave me too late, and the frost came too soon for them to flourish. But our Italian green beans were the best I’ve ever had–with a little lemon juice, butter, and fresh-cracked pepper. And I can remember the grand entrance of green spouts in my kitchen window herbs last spring, and how it was like an adrenaline kick to the wintered-over heart.

So when you place a sunlight-starved girl in front of rows and rows of colorful seed packets all for $2 and under, how can she resist?

But I think, at its root, this is more than spring fever. And I don’t think its a stretch to say that its in human nature to want to cultivate, a legacy that traces back to Eden, the garden God lovingly created for His people in which to dwell, and which He charged them to care for. I love Wendell Berry’s connection between our food and theology that he writes in The Gift of Good Land,

“To live, we must daily break the body and shed the blood of Creation. When we do this knowingly, lovingly, skillfully, reverently, it is a sacrament. When we do it ignorantly, greedily, clumsily, destructively, it is a desecration. In such desecration we condemn ourselves to spiritual and moral loneliness, and others to want.”

 

I believe there is a sacramental grace in the simple, sustainable, and made-from-scratch. There is frustration too. I don’t always look at my sink full of crusty dishes as a sacrament. I am disheartened to invest such care in seeds only to find them stillborn under the soil. And I am pretty sure I am cursed for life when it comes to homemade pizza dough. But in between, there are pockets of incredible grace. When I plant a seed, host a meal, share some bread, I feel that I am engaging in the work of creating and cultivating, and to me, this feels like a blessing. There’s still something in me that is thrilled to bring good things to life.

Where do you encounter sacramental grace in the everyday? How do you bring good things to life in small and daily ways?

P.S. I’m tinkering with my blog look…what do you think? I’m open to suggestions! 

Beauty Will Save the World

I thrive when surrounded by beauty. It’s why I pick flesh flowers from my garden for the table. It’s why there are bright paintings covering my wall in my office. It’s why I love good literature, good food, art museums, city parks, church sanctuaries. Beauty ushers me into His heart.

But I am wounded every time the church casts suspicion on beauty, beholding it with fear rather than awe.

I experienced this disappointment again this morning while reading a rather uncharitable review of Ann Voskamp’s One Thousand  Gifts, the bestseller about learning thankfulness in the presence of our Creator God.

As someone who works in the publishing industry, I was impressed and incredibly grateful to read One Thousand Gifts as a mature literary work. In these pages, I see a poet-saint who truly savors words and understands a writer’s craft. Here is a woman who writes from her core–seeing the world with her senses wide open and articulating beauty in a truly memorable way. It is my deep regret that I do not see more of this from Christian bookshelves.

I read many wonderful Christian books every year; books that reflect sound biblical wisdom, moving stories, and sharp insight and research. But I also know if I want good literature, if I want to read words that will resound in my head all afternoon with raw and haunting beauty, I have to turn to secular books. I get burnt out reading stories saturated in Christian cliche. I become cynical when confronted with sloppy prose and functional, overused descriptions. I want more than that. I want to be awed.

Do you know what truth has captured my attention for weeks? Reading Genesis, I learned something that is changing my entire outlook on faith: Eden means “delight.” We serve a Creator God who is infinite in beauty, who created us with electric sensitivity to all things good and beautiful. He gave us eyes to see, ears to hear, tongues to taste–so many ways to feel and to experience His aesthetic truth.

Eden means delight. It means pleasure. Because this is Who God Is. Sometimes we are afraid of feeling, beholding, of any mention of pleasure. We don’t like to talk about sensuality in church, associating it with hedonistic immorality, but it really means beholding with our senses. As God’s people, why should we fear beautiful things? Why can’t we celebrate them?

The thing about art is that it relies on the viewer’s taste and preference, and sometimes an artistic expression is just not our cup of tea. I understand that. But I would hope that even if we cannot personally appreciate a Christian expression of beauty, we will respect it as a human response to Creator’s call to fashion beauty and bring good things to life.

What is your experience with artistic expression? Does it influence your faith? How do you think beauty plays a part in God’s economy?

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