In the Disney animated film...
Illustration
In the Disney animated film, The Hunchback of Notre Dame, there is a scene
that depicts a raucous Parisian street festival. On that day, everything is topsy-turvy, sings
Clopin, the narrator-jester. At that festival, they crown the king of fools, who is actually
the ugliest, most hideous person there. Why do they crown the least likely person, sings
Clopin? Why, because everything is topsy-turvy! A king becomes a clown and a clown
becomes a king. The one they crown that day is Quasimodo, the gentle hunchback who
rings the bells at Notre Dame Cathedral.
It is a topsy-turvy act, a reversal -- but no more topsy-turvy than for God to enter the world as the son of a humble Galilean artisan and his peasant wife. Throughout his ministry, Jesus demonstrates a remarkable concern for "the least of these" -- a topsy-turvy thinking again! When he returns on the clouds of heaven, it will be the biggest reversal of all.
It is a topsy-turvy act, a reversal -- but no more topsy-turvy than for God to enter the world as the son of a humble Galilean artisan and his peasant wife. Throughout his ministry, Jesus demonstrates a remarkable concern for "the least of these" -- a topsy-turvy thinking again! When he returns on the clouds of heaven, it will be the biggest reversal of all.
