Our faith is in a God who is good, and good all the time, even when buildings burn and we lose hope in structures and lose faith in human beings who set the fires. Our faith is in a God who is good in the midst of pestilence, and war, and the brutality of authority without restraint, and ideology let lose to murder and rape. That faith is because of beauty once seen in what and whom God has made, that such stuff and such people were actually created by him.
Recently a friend of mine became the victim of an arsonist. He owns a small hotel and one night someone tried to set it on fire. Thankfully, no one was killed, but folks did have to jump off of a balcony to escape. The resulting and arduous experience of figuring out the cause, of getting a settlement with the insurance company, of working his way through the fire department, arson detectives, claims agents, and city bureaucrats was frustrating, and sometimes exasperating.
After finally getting word that he would get an insurance settlement I texted him, “God is good.” He came back at me with the thought, “even if I hadn’t gotten a settlement God is still good.” I complimented him on his good theology, and so he sent me a simple message. “Ashes and good theology!”
It seems to me there is a lot in that phrase. There is a lot of reality in it, and a lot of hope too. Okay, so the hotel is still destroyed, it is no longer beautiful, no longer something or someplace that anyone would want to stay in. All the hardship of having to rebuild it, of working his way through designers, contractors, builders, and government regulation still lies ahead.
The hope that someday people will make reservations trusting that it is a safe place to stay, that it will again be a means of income, all remain to be seen. Whatever comes, my friend has a good theology, and that theology is one which believes in the immutable character of God as benevolent, compassionate, kind, loving, caring and mindful for all he has made. He has taken the Christian commitment of believing that these things never change about God.
I guess my friend doesn’t live in Ferguson, Missouri. Maybe he doesn’t live in Mosul, Iraq, or in Liberia, or Donetsk, Ukraine. Surely theology has to adjust and change for such places and for various contexts full of despair, evil, injustice and death. How can our circumstances not change our view of God? How can our pain and suffering, whether as individuals, families, ethnic groups, or nations not affect our view of what God is like, or even if he exists?
One of the important sub-points of Theology, (and not just philosophy in my opinion,) is aesthetics: Our view of beauty, what is pleasing, fulfilling, hopeful. The sensory aspects of life that give us hope and renew our hope. They are emotional and they give us comfort. It is order and symmetry, it is proportion, it is attractive and stimulating, it is the sense or rightness and balance or even intriguing strangeness in things and place; it is akin to justice but in a different plane. Whether made by the unseen hand of God, or what others call nature, or made by humans and even intellectual thought – beauty gives all of us hope if indeed we can see or experience it.
What do we do when it is gone or destroyed? What do we do when what brought us delight turns to ashes, and do those ashes rattle our expectation of continuity, and convince us that all good things will not remain but fade, diminish, rot, and burn? What do we do with the reality that the children we held from the birthing table, whose fingers and toes we counted, whose coos and giggles, unbridled laughter and joy, and sweet and tender flesh are now dead and buried in a box? Our only visual of amazingly beautiful people left in photographs which only too soon will fade. Their images trapped in digital electrons so easily deleted, as if God pushed the wrong key on the board and can’t get it back; all his work for nothing.
The Bible (Romans chapter 1) teaches us that God’s eternal power has been clearly perceived in what he has made. “Eternal power” means it is one of the things that never runs out, never gives out, and can never turn to dust and ashes. Now our wickedness takes that truth and tries to smash the life out of it, attempts to scream over its voice, and uses all its argument to deny and suppress what the stars and the universe shout so loudly: “God is forever, and he is the creator of all beauty,” and thus all goodness is his idea and his work. Eternity and beauty taken together leave us with one exhilarating conclusion: God is good and that goodness is neither circumstantial nor temporary.
This is not a denial of ashes, or of the reality of injustice, or loss, or pain. Good theology doesn’t deny the inevitable rubbish of sin, the wake of evil, the waste of a despised perfection we lost once in a beautiful garden to which we cannot return. Good theology doesn’t deny the reality of ashes; rather it affirms the undiminished love of God in the face of a diminished and fallen creation.
Ashes without faith in a good God is a skull’s mouth filled with dust, there is and can be nothing left for which to hope. Without faith in the benevolent constancy of God we are left with anger, grief, remorse, and bitter frustration for the loss we bear of all that we loved and valued. We despair of ever having the justice for which we fought and dreamed but which we will never see or see no more, this is all that is left us. Unless we think memories of auld lang syne are enough; death will erase those too.
Our faith is in a God who is good, and good all the time, even when buildings burn and we lose hope in structures and lose faith in human beings who set the fires. Our faith is in a God who is good in the midst of pestilence, and war, and the brutality of authority without restraint, and ideology let lose to murder and rape. That faith is because of beauty once seen in what and whom God has made, that such stuff and such people were actually created by him.
That faith is because of love now known in the face of a Christ who died for our sins, and forgives us for our part in this common tragedy of earthly rot and human failure. That faith is in the future revealed of a new heaven and new earth where there is no more suffering, or crying, or pain. Our faith in a good God is because we believe that the God who took dust and formed a man can bring life even out of ashes if he chooses. Resurrection makes the phrase “second chance” a short-sighted and anemic perspective. An eternal God has a lot more to give than a second chance, or the finding of an erased hard drive, or even the hope of learning from our mistakes.
Every person, and every place, and every culture can breathe a constant renewal of hope from the only source of life, who calls himself “I AM.” And as long as he is, ashes are not the definitive end. It is as Job said, “Though worms destroy this body, yet in my flesh shall I see God” (Job 19:26).
Randy Nabors is a minister in the Presbyterian Church in America, is Pastor Emeritus of New City Fellowship in Chattanooga Tenn., and the Urban & Mercy Ministries Coordinator- The New City Network at Mission to North America (MNA). This article is taken from his blog and is used with permission.
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