Saturday, November 17, 2012

Engaging The Story

I’ve been debating the whole blogging thing for a while now.  I’ve had to wrestle with a few questions and get past my tendency to overthink things and never get around to acting on them.  The first question I kept asking myself is “Does anyone really want to read another religious blog?”  Well, I really don’t know the answer to that.  The next question was actually two-fold; what should I write about, and what should I call it?  Since I’m obviously writing and posting I suppose I’ve gotten past the first question and finally decided to put fingers to keyboard.  And the answer to the second question…well that’s the topic of this post.
 
The Story
When I was in seminary I was introduced to the idea of the story of God.  Now this wasn’t a totally new concept, people have understood the Bible to contain stories ever since they were first written down, and the Bible is often touted as The Story.  What was new for me was the idea of THE story.  The story as I refer to it is found in the Bible yes, but it is more than that, it also encompasses our individual and corporate engagement with it, past, present, and future.
 
Engaging The Story
My first name for this blog was going to be Entering the Story.  I liked it.  It was short, and simple, and seemed to convey what I wanted to get across, that as Christians we engage with the story by entering into it, by becoming part of it and accepting it as our own.  It was a phrase I’d used in seminary to describe the life of faith, discipleship, and worship.  But the more I thought about it, the more I felt something wasn’t quite right with it.  At one level I didn’t want to limit this blog to a Christian audience. The audience wasn’t the big issue though; something else was still nagging at me.  What I finally realized was the phrase “entering the story” implied that at some point you are or were outside of it.  Immediately I knew that was wrong.
Not long after my realization that I had a name I couldn’t use I was driving down the road and out of the blue I was thinking about The Matrix.  Now this isn’t odd, random things pop into my head all the time and leave just as quick, but this one lingered for a while.  And then it hit me, The Matrix was the metaphor I was looking for to describe how we engage the story.
It’s funny how often I see The Matrix used to relate a philosophical or theological theme.  It’s a movie filled with great metaphorical imagery and language.  As I drove down the road that day I was pulled into “the pill scene” where Neo meets Morpheus.  Neo is brought into an abandoned apartment building and told that everything he’s ever known, or thought he knew about the real world was wrong, a lie, a story created to deceive him.  He was born a slave, born in bondage, born into a prison for his mind that he cannot sense, born into the Matrix.  Morpheus tells Neo that he must feel like Alice “tumbling down the rabbit hole.”   He offers Neo two pills and gives him a choice, “take the blue pill and the story ends, you wake up in your bed and believe whatever you want to believe.”  Take the red pill, “you stay in wonderland and I show you how deep the rabbit hole goes.”*
The Matrix had always been there whether Neo (or anyone else) knew it or not.  So had the real world, the world that had been kept hidden form him by the powers behind the Matrix.  He was a part of the story even if he didn’t realize it.  But in the pill scene Neo was finally given the opportunity to engage in the story in the way that he chose and The Matrix was never the same again.  The same metaphor applies to the story of God and creation.
Whether we enter into the story isn’t the issue.  Everyone is a part of the story whether they realize it or not, whether they believe it or not.  What matters is how we engage the story and the part we play within it.  That is what I hope to explore in this blog, the many and various ways we engage the story of God and his creation, the story of sin and death, the story of redemptive history, the story of incarnation, re-creation, salvation and everlasting life.
 
What to Expect
What can you expect from this blog?  Who knows?  The possibilities are endless.  I really don’t want to limit it too much.  I’ve got some ideas in mind for early on if I can just get them all down.  Thankfully the title allows for a wide range of topics.  So we’ll see where it leads.  In the meantime take some time to consider just how you’ve engaged the story and the part you play within it.
 
*The Matrix. Dir. Andy & Larry Wachowski.  Perf. Keanu Reeves, Lawrence Fishburn. Warner Bros. Pictures, 1999. Film.

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