"Beauty"
/Dear WRC,
I’ve seen some beautiful things over this last month that I wanted to tell you about. In no particular order:
-Last month I saw a group of women—young and old—working for hours together under threat of rain, managing a less-than-ideal situation with a vendor, all in order to offer a big fake check drawn on poster board to the directors of our food pantry, who received it with tears in their eyes. Isn’t that beautiful? It wasn’t the $1800 or the impact it will have on the food pantry space. It’s the lives involved and the love so freely given.
-While preaching on friendship, I noticed several people in the pews turn to look at each other with knowing smiles. These are friendships that I know would not exist outside of this church and if not for their shared love of Jesus. There was gratitude in their eyes, mutual affection.
-I saw a young man come forward to receive communion for the first time, and I saw not only the glow on his face, but the pride and joy on his parents’!
-I saw our Family Ministries Director take a 6-year-old from the church to the softball game of an 18-year-old in order to show her love for both and create a new bond between them.
-I saw several people crowded around another in the back of the sanctuary before worship one Sunday to offer their loving presence out of genuine empathy and care.
I’ve seen some beautiful things over this last month. Beauty is one of the Transcendentals that philosophers sometimes talk about, right up there with truth and goodness. Beauty is something you know when you see it. It’s connected to truth and goodness and enhanced by them. It calls out to us at a level deeper than just cognition. Our desire for beauty is, I think, a longing for what should be and some lingering sense within us of the God we were created for. Truth and goodness get much of the press, but don’t sleep on beauty! There is so much that is beautiful around here. I hope that you’re noticing it. I hope that you’re bearing witness to it. You don’t see this kind of stuff outside of the church community. This beauty may just be the most important thing we can offer the world today.
So, as we enter the summer together, here’s a challenge for you: do something beautiful. Use what God has given you and do something beautiful. Maybe you’ll make something. Maybe you’ll live something. I hope you’ll tell me what you did afterwards!
In Christ,
Pastor Andy