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Weekly Devotional
June 4, 2012
God’s Peace be with you all.
Genesis 1:1-5 In the beginning when
God created the heavens and the earth, 2 the
earth was a formless void and darkness covered the face of
the deep, while a wind from God swept over the face of the
waters. 3 Then God said, "Let there be light";
and there was light. 4 And God saw that the
light was good; and God separated the light from the
darkness. 5 God called the light Day, and the
darkness he called Night. And there was evening and there
was morning, the first day.
Our
devotion today come from Dr. David Lose, who was the
presenter at this year’s synod assembly.
PLEASE
WATCH THE VIDEO AS YOU READ THIS!!
“There are few things more
satisfying that making something – putting in time
and effort and having something tangible, something you can
hold in your hands, when you’re finished. Fewer and fewer of
us find ourselves doing that kind of work. At the end of the
day, there’s isn’t much many of us can hold on to. It
doesn’t mean that what we’re doing isn’t worthwhile,
important, or have significant consequences; just that the
fruits of much of our labor is intangible.
Which might explain why I liked the
following video so much. In just over three minutes it shows
299 hours of labor – along with a lot of wood, sweat,
experience, and passion – that go into making a flamenco
guitar. The craftsman is Vasilis Lazarides; the filmmaker
Dimitris Ladopoulos; the music in the background by Edsart
Udo de Haes. The result is simply breath-taking.
It is easy, I realize, to
romanticize such an endeavor, particularly when we see it
condensed into three beautiful minutes. 299 hours is, after
all, a heck of a lot of time. Most of us have neither the
time nor the patience nor the experience to contemplate such
a venture.
But part of what is so enthralling,
I think, is that at the end there is something tangible to
show, something that is made. The name of the video
series of which this is a part is called “The Art of
Making,” and I think that it points to the joy of creating
something that can be not just touched and felt but also
given. In my experience, when we create, it is almost never
wholly or even largely because we want something to keep.
Rather, it is the sheer joy of creating something
pleasurable, often followed by the other joy of giving it
away.
Which puts us in touch, I think,
with the nature of God. The One who creates out of joy and
love, and gives to have that joy and love made complete.
Perhaps this is why I think it’s
important for all of us – even those of us who work with
information, or language, or people and therefore never
quite see an “end-product” – to connect with tasks where we
actually make something, even if only once in a while.
So perhaps this weekend you can find
time to cook a meal not because you have to get food on the
table but because you want to prepare something, make
something, that gives delight. Or perhaps you can pull some
weeds or plant some seeds in the garden. Or maybe you can do
some finger painting with a child or relearn the craft of
sidewalk art. Or maybe you can make a simple card – make it,
don’t buy it – and send it to a friend. Or maybe it will be
as simple as mowing the lawn and, when you’re done, being
able to stand back and admire the labor that has resulted in
something that is, at least for the moment, well tended.
It doesn’t have to be much, but you
might find yourself renewed by the act and art of making and
connected, again and perhaps differently, to the God we
confess is the maker and giver of all good things.
A word of thanks to
Open Culture where
I found this video featured.”
Source:
http://www.davidlose.net/2012/06/the-art-of-making/
In our prayers this week:
Kay, Daniel, Ann, Mike C., Wayne C., Bobby
God’s Peace,
Pastor Judson
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