Acts 5:29-42; 1 Peter 1:3-9; John 20:19-31
More and more, people in our culture are less concerned about outcomes as they are the processes to achieve them. This is especially true of people who fail to accomplish their desired outcomes. Rather than acknowledge that failure is the outcome, people play it down and focus on the benefits of having done something that stretched or challenged them. While it’s good that people find something positive in having tried and failed, refusing to recognize failure as the outcome when it actually is the result of one’s efforts is a destructive form of denial. Focusing on the process and minimizing outcomes creates a great sense of uncertainty — one that leads to everything we do being pointless. Seeing the process as more meaningful than the outcome is like seeing a journey as more important than the destination. While process and journey can be enriching, they only serve us well if they are moving us toward something of worth and importance. Otherwise, we’re wandering aimlessly.
It’s not surprising that our culture sees outcomes in this way. People embrace and promote a worldview that is based on the premise that we came from nothing, evolved through random forces, and will one day return to nothing. If nothingness is our origin and our outcome, all we have left is the journey. Of course, that means that the journey is mostly pointless, which really leaves us with nothing. From nothing, for nothing, to nothing. How desperately depressing!
Faith stands in contrast to this worldview. The God who has called us into the Faith “has caused us to be born again to a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead.” Like the people of the world around us, we value the journey that we are experiencing. However, unlike them, we know that the journey pales in comparison to the outcome. We are also distinctly different from them because we are certain of the outcome of faith. Whatever our journeys may consist of and wherever they may lead us in this world, “the outcome of [our] faith, the salvation of [our] souls” is certain because in Holy Baptism we have been buried with Christ in His death and raised to life in His Resurrection. Our outcome is, by His grace, taking hold of “an inheritance that is imperishable, undefiled, and unfading” which is being kept in Heaven for us while we journey through this world in faith and hope and love.
No comments:
Post a Comment