Sunday, October 12, 2014

In Holy Pursuit





John 14:1-12; Psalm 23

            One way to gain a fresh perspective on a very familiar passage of Scripture such as Psalm 23, is to ask yourself how you would choose to make it into a movie.   Imagining God’s Word in this way can really make it come alive with deeper and more relevant meaning.   So, if you could, what kind of movie genre would you pick to bring this Psalm to the big screen of your life and this whole world?
             It’s kind of a Western.    Green pastures.  Still waters.  Moseying along trails in the name of true justice, against a backdrop of gorgeous sunsets sitting atop valley peaks.   I’m definitely seeing The Duke leading the cast.  
            There again, it would certainly work as a classic Drama too.   Beautifully orchestrated soundtrack with lots of close-ups on the face of a solitary figure struggling with the ultimate meaning of life.   Coping with the multifaceted reality of death, starving for protection, goodness and mercy.  At the end of this bit of Masterpiece Theater, I see a very moving scene taking place at a church fellowship dinner.   A Sally Field sort of flick.
            I also think Psalm 23 could possibly be a comedy.    Comedy movies depend on exaggerating relationships and situations.  The good ones do this to hammer home profound truth about the vulnerabilities we all face.    Think Mrs. Doubtfire.   And maybe, just maybe, there could be a slapstick scene with God preparing a place at the table for enemies while cups are running over.   Morgan Freeman, of course, would once again be cast in this role.   Though the late George Burns would be my choice, mostly on account of his wife’s theologically oriented name, Gracie. 
            Of the different options for how to depict Psalm 23 in film, I’d be most excited to direct it as an action movie.    I know it’s usually read at somber but faithfully calming occasions such as funerals and so it might be hard to think of these words in a much livelier way.  But bear with me and my biblically stirred up imagination as we dig a little deeper into the original language and historical context with which Psalm 23 was written.
               I’m seeing an epic action movie.  Think the Hollywood versions of the Lord of the Rings or the Chronicles of Narnia.    I see malicious, evil villains pursuing groups of innocent people up mountainsides and back down through dark valleys.   I see homes suddenly abandoned by this terrible persecution, the food of family meals left behind on dinner tables.  
            The film would focus on one of these fleeing people in particular.    We first see him hiding behind a tree, scared to death of moving out into the open.    His facial expressions reveal a soul suffering great loss and struggling to find some kind of true protection in the presence of so many enemies.
            Then, seemingly out of nowhere, the film’s hero swiftly appears.    He is a man of action, yet he walks calmly through all the chaos.    He has come to defeat evil enemies, yet he wears a simple cloak instead of high tech armor and carries a shepherd’s staff instead of a machete.   
            Safely bypassing the flurry of furious attacks, the hero walks directly to the protection seeking soul sequestered behind the tree.   With powerfully gentle words and an immediately trustworthy presence, he coaxes this character to come out from behind the barrier and walk beside him.   “There is a safe and serene place,” he says, “that I have already gone ahead and prepared for you.  Yes, even in the midst of all this deadly strife.  I’ve come back to lead you there.”   
            But the camera pans in close and we see that the still frightened soul isn’t sure whether or not to trust the one come to the rescue.   An incredible promise had been made by this one-of-a-kind hero, yet something sinful stirs deep within, questioning whether or not it’s better to take on the chances of survival alone.   The soundtrack booms a dramatic timpani as this deep questioning triggers an impulsive, action packed sprint away from the hero and back through the deep woods.   But the hero is undeterred by the distrust.  He turns in steadfast pursuit, staff in hand and unwilling to let the struggling soul perish.   
            At the climax of this blockbuster movie, we see beautifully cinematic scenes of complete restoration.  Both the rescued and his Rescuer are reclining side by side in a wide open green pasture beside still water.  They have just enjoyed a feast, the remains of which are on a nearby picnic table and still being enjoyed by the surprising company of former enemies.   We realize then that the hero had gone before to set the table on behalf of them all and then gone back in pursuit of getting them all to experience goodness and mercy.
            I would title this action movie, “In Holy Pursuit.”   My inspiration for this comes from the last verse of the famous Psalm – “Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life.”   These are comforting words of blessed assurance.  They remind us that our Lord doesn’t ever abandon us.    But that’s not all.  There’s a deeper meaning, one that makes this scene more fitting to be directed by the likes of epic director Peter Jackson than of the good but slow moving films directed these days by Clint Eastwood.   
            What do you think of when you read and hear the word “follow”?   Steadily walking behind someone?   If so, then this Psalm suggests the goodness and mercy of our Lord steadily walks behind us wherever we may wander.    
            This English word, however, is a translation of a Hebrew word that has a significantly different shade of meaning.   The original word means “to ardently pursue, to run after with the aim of securing.”  It’s the same word used in Exodus to describe the Pharaoh’s army in pursuit of the Israelites.    In Psalm 23, of course, it’s not a figurehead of evil minions giving chase, it’s the font of all blessings. [i]    And this is in direct contrast to the divine goodness and mercy pursuing Psalm 23’s author, King David, for it is widely believed that this was written in the aftermath of his son Absalom’s attempt to assassinate him.    He was in full flight out of Jerusalem, hoping to stay alive.   Talk about an epic action movie!  And all the while, David trusted the Lord to both go ahead of him to prepare the way and to run after him with the intention of securing his salvation.    He trusted the Good Shepherd would pursue him and ultimately carry him safely home to the house of God forever. 
            Psalm 23 offers the comfort and security that our Good Shepherd continues to do the same for us by victoriously outrunning evil, pursuing and persuading us to let him lead us all into His peaceable kingdom.   When it comes right down to it, the most accurate genre for this Psalm is that of an epic love story.
            I’ll leave you with a modern day scene of this amazing and all inclusive love in action.   The setting is Iraq, biblically known as Babylonia.  It’s 1993 and Lt. Col. Gary Morsch is wearing fifty pounds of body armor while riding in the back of a Humvee next to a gunner.   He was on the road to Baghdad serving as a field doctor.   Also in the Humvee was his very sick patient – a POW.   With the constant reality of suicide bombers and snipers all around his convoy, as well as feeling lonely and homesick, he struggled within himself to accept why he was risking his life for an enemy.  
            It was a Sunday.   He was also depressed about missing chapel service.   I really like this guy!  But he had an iPod music player with 1,000 songs on it to chase away his sorrow.   He set it to random and the first song to fill his weary head and heart was by the Brooklyn Tabernacle Choir singing these words – “Surely the presence of the Lord is in this place, I can feel His mighty power and His grace: I can hear the brush of angels' wings, I see glory on each face; surely the presence of the Lord is in this place."  
            He immediately felt led into a deep sense of powerfully abiding peace.   It was like nothing he’d ever felt before.   God was around him, above him, within him.   With tears running down his dusty cheeks, he peered out the thick, bulletproof windows of the Humvee.  In that desolate enemy place, he saw “Iraqis in their flowing robes, their mud-walled houses, children at play, tall and stately palm trees.”   He sensed God in all he saw … with the Shiites, the Sunnis, the Kurds. God was surely there.[ii]
            We’re all part of each and every setting where Psalm 23 comes alive.  Go out into the week ahead willing to be directed and protected by the Good Shepherd’s love all along good paths and through the darkest valleys.   And if you stray, don’t ever worry.   Just trust that our Lord is always in holy pursuit of your heart.   Amen.  



[i] http://www.blueletterbible.org/lang/lexicon/lexicon.cfm?Strongs=H7291&t=KJV
[ii] Lt. Col. Gary Morsch (as told to Dean Nelson), "God Is Here, Too," Today's Christian (November/December 05)

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