Here's Friday Theology by the Evangelical Alliance:
A sense of story
The Olympic torch relay which began its journey around the UK this week hasn’t
been without its controversy. But what has captured my attention, and then my
imagination, is the sense of story.
Among the torch bearers are
celebrities and sporting heroes, but the majority are ordinary people who have
been noticed because of something out-of-the-ordinary. There was 16-year old Ben
Fox from Swindon, who only has one leg and wants to win an Olympic gold in
wheelchair basketball in 2016. Then there was Hayley Mowbray, 26, from
Cheltenham, who teaches at a school for young people with severe behavioural
problems. She has been recognised as having an exceptional ability to inspire
others and provide hope when all seems hopeless. Twenty-eight-year old Mark
Ormrod lost an arm and both his legs when he stood on a landmine in Afghanistan.
He was told he would never walk again, yet two years ago he completed a 3,500
mile charity run across the US. And Louis Gill, at the age of 15, cycled 300
miles on an old bike to raise money for an orphanage in Uganda. His nomination
story says that ”he represents everything that is good in our teenagers and
young people”.
All these stories capture something inspiring about the
people who live in this land. Together, they remind us that, in the words of
John Donne:
“No man is an island, Entire of itself.
Each is a piece of the continent, A part of the
main.”
We succeed or fail as our individual stories connect to the
whole. The Olympic torch relay has reminded me of this. It celebrates diversity,
it reminds us that we’re connected and it celebrates how the story of one
person, can improve the story of another.
However, it’s bigger than
this. The Olympics, as athletes from all over the world gather to compete,
connects us to the global story. Again, diversity is celebrated, and we are
reminded that we are all connected. The torch relay also connects us to a
historic story. The Olympic flame traces its way back to the stories of the
Greek gods, the ancient games were designed to conjure images of the divine, and
the relationship between humans and the gods. The Torch Relay, itself, a modern
invention, is steeped in a historical story, not least because it first took
place in the run-up the 1936 Olympics in Berlin, that were organised by the
Nazis.
So there are many stories, within a story, within a story, within
a story. My story, and your story, are being woven into the story of the UK,
within the story of the world now, within the story of humanity past, present
and future.
It reminds us that there is a meta-narrative running through
human history, it’s the story that our stories are being woven into,
and that’s God’s story. A story that meanders with purpose from creation to new
creation. A story about destruction and restoration, faithfulness and
unfaithfulness, sin and salvation. A story with the reoccurring refrain of:
“They will be my people, and I will be their God.”
When Paul was in
Greece, the source of the Olympic flame, he walked around the Areopagus in
Athens looking at the Greeks’ objects of worship. He said: “I…found an alter
with this inscription: TO AN UNKNOWN GOD. Now what you worship as something
unknown I am going to proclaim to you.”He was taking one of their stories to
point people to the one true God. Today, as people are desperate to make sure
their story is connected and it is significant, we need to be pointing them to
God and His story, so they can connect to it and find significance in
Him.
Phil Green, Programme Manager for the Evangelical
Alliance
I like this thought. We are all stories - our stories woven together, meandering with purpose from creation to new creation...
We are part of the Divine work of new creation!
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