When Marvin Hamlisch and Edward...
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When Marvin Hamlisch and Edward Kleban wrote A Chorus Line, they created a musical about the human condition. The play has a competitive cast of dancers expressing human feelings: envy, jealousy, hatred, anger, and pride.
One dancer, Diane Morales, recalled in song her improvisational class. She was forced by her instructor to imagine that she was on a bobsled going down a steep mountain in a snowstorm. Morales was from Puerto Rico and had absolutely no clue how to play this scene. She sang, "I reached right down to the bottom of my soul ... and I felt nothing." Again and again the instructor pushed her to imagine the frigid ride down a snowy mountain run, but she could not feel it.
So many Christians look at the Book of Revelation and are without a clue how to understand the flowery and ostentatious imagery. We just "feel nothing." However, the writer's news is good: in the end God will be with us (v. 3). Christians will arrive in a joyous place without death and mourning nor crying and pain (v. 4). Believers will dwell together in fellowship. We will sit with a God who loves us very much.
New Testament writers have hinted about the glorious times to come. It will be an eschatological moment: we expect that the world will end and our loving God will be there to greet us with open arms. That loving God is revealed unconditionally in "I am making everything new."
Unlike Diane Morales, standing alone in the chorus line, when Christians face this new world order we will be with a loving God. Unlike anything we have witnessed before, we will feel something great. Christian faith is grounded in this great hope for the future.
-- Becker 1
One dancer, Diane Morales, recalled in song her improvisational class. She was forced by her instructor to imagine that she was on a bobsled going down a steep mountain in a snowstorm. Morales was from Puerto Rico and had absolutely no clue how to play this scene. She sang, "I reached right down to the bottom of my soul ... and I felt nothing." Again and again the instructor pushed her to imagine the frigid ride down a snowy mountain run, but she could not feel it.
So many Christians look at the Book of Revelation and are without a clue how to understand the flowery and ostentatious imagery. We just "feel nothing." However, the writer's news is good: in the end God will be with us (v. 3). Christians will arrive in a joyous place without death and mourning nor crying and pain (v. 4). Believers will dwell together in fellowship. We will sit with a God who loves us very much.
New Testament writers have hinted about the glorious times to come. It will be an eschatological moment: we expect that the world will end and our loving God will be there to greet us with open arms. That loving God is revealed unconditionally in "I am making everything new."
Unlike Diane Morales, standing alone in the chorus line, when Christians face this new world order we will be with a loving God. Unlike anything we have witnessed before, we will feel something great. Christian faith is grounded in this great hope for the future.
-- Becker 1
