Monday, June 13, 2005

This Desert Life

We all go through times that we might look back and call “desert times.” They are times when we feel empty, dry, parched. Then there are other times when things are good.
Or are they?
What if all of our “good times” are nothing more than times that we are distracted from the fact that there is something profoundly wrong with everything around us? What if those times are distractions from something much more alarming:
There is something profoundly wrong inside of us.

Is this depressing? Am I saying that all of my good times have been nothing more than me pretending that things are better than they are? Maybe.
A few Christmases ago, Karina and I got a DVD player (we are horribly behind the times). We bought it and also the extended version of The Fellowship of the Ring. I was so excited. Not only was this a four-hour movie that I loved, but it was also hours and hours of extras and bonus features. The entertainment and fun would be inexhaustible.
I hooked up the DVD player and it would not work. I moved around some wires, but still it would not work. I tried several different options, but I was unable to access my endless stream of goodness and satisfaction that would come with this DVD. Those were desert times. Finally, I found the right combination of wires, channels, and plugs. I pressed play and began to watch. Ah. Good times at last.
Is that as good as it gets. The DVD was as good as could be expected, but it has been exhausted and there is still something deeply wrong outside and inside. What if all of our good times are times when we are doing our best to deny the inevitable reality:
We live in the desert
Is it resigning myself to a life of emptiness and gloom to embrace the fact that I live in the desert? Maybe not. If I recognize that I live in the desert, I will not expect the Oasis that I so long for. And I do not lose hope for the Oasis, because I believe that it is coming. If I do not expect the desert to be the Oasis, then I can enjoy the simple pleasures of the desert, and I can smile at those with whom I live in the desert. I can enjoy the desert for what it is, and long for the Oasis that I will one day enter.
Is it strange to think of this life as a desert life? Jesus’ apostles referred to us as pilgrims, strangers, and wanderers. We are referred to as people without a country. We live in the desert. We long for a better country. That is the Oasis. Oh, how wonderful it will be to live there. The outside is beautiful, and the inside is fixed. . .at last.
In this desert life, maybe one of the best things we can do is to
stop pretending that we are living in an oasis

and
embrace life in the desert

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