I imagine having an out-of-body experience. As I gaze down upon an ancient table, I see a large book before me, bound in leather with silver clasps and edges. As I open the book, the words on the pages come to life, showing story after story of lives being lived concurrently. The stories, at times, are independent of each other, but most of the time, they intertwine with other stories to make a complex and much bigger story.
Oh, there is my story! In chapter 758! Just a small part of that chapter. But as I read it now, I see how it is connected to the other stories and is part of the bigger story. My story is not just my story. It is part of the story of the faith community in which I dwell. It is also the story of my local church. It is part of the story of the lives I immediately intersect, and the waves of my story ripple out into the stories of others that I know and further out into the stories of people I do not know. And stunningly, the stories of others ripple into my story.
And as I look, I realize that my story is not really my story. In an age of individualism, in which we are taught that everything must revolve around “me,” including “my personal relationship with God,” I realize that my story only has meaning when it is in relationship with all these other stories. I realize that my story is not as important as I’d like to make it. It is humbling to realize that God’s story is much bigger than my own, and that my story only has relevance because it is in this grand book – the story of what God is doing in the world.
This gets my curiosity going. What is this huge story? I turn to the front of the book, to the table of contents. It is marked as five parts, full of many chapters, telling lots of mini-stories that make up God’s big story.
Part 1: The Wonder of What God Has Made
Part 2: The Heartbreak of Humanity’s Rebellion and of Creation’s Brokenness
Part 3: The First Advent of the Son of God, the Redeemer of Rebellious Humanity
Part 4: The Wonder of What God is Re-Making
Part 5: The Second Advent of the Son of God, the Restorer of All that God Has Made
I see the chapter in which my story is found, and the story in which my church community is found. But now I see it in context. There. In Part 4 – in between the “First Advent” and the “Second Advent” – in the chapter titled, “The Wonder of What God is Re-Making.”
Part 1: Wonder
Part 1 has a chapter telling the story of Adam and Eve, the pinnacle of God’s creation. But it also has chapters about all the wondrous things God has created. God’s invisible qualities—his eternal power and divine nature—can clearly be seen, being understood from what has been made (Romans 1:20). From the majesty of the mountains to the little Alpine Forget-Me-Nots that bloom on their slopes. From the grandeur of a 200 ton Blue Whale to the tiny beauty of a two-inch Neon Tetra fish. From a huge nebula seen in outer space to the splitting of cells in a petri dish.
I also see that humanity is made as God’s image, responsible for representing God in this wonderful creation, ruling it on God’s behalf as stewards of all that God has made. Humanity is given the task of creating culture, making stuff from the raw material that God has made. The creation process, therefore, will continue all through the rest of the book.
Part 2: Heartbreak
But the story takes a terrible, ugly turn in Part 2, as those who are the pinnacle of the good creation turn on the Creator. The results are tragic. Chapter after chapter of ugly and disgusting events. Of murder, lies, betrayal. As I read these stories, I easily see myself implicated as well. I’m part of the problem like these people were. I yearn to be part of the solution.
But through it all, a thread of hope: the promise of a new chapter to come. The person who can lead the way in that solution: The Advent of the Son of God.
Part 3: First Advent
In Part 3, I see even more chapters of murder, rape, brutality, oppression, and bondage. But, thankfully, I also see, interwoven throughout, the story of God’s redemption being brought into the world through a simple nation of people. Their prophets promise that God will bring redemption and wholeness through the coming “Messiah,” or “Christ.”.
The last prophet, John the Baptist, proclaims, “Prepare the way for the Lord” and Part 3 climaxes when the Christ, Jesus, comes into the world to bring redemption to all who will believe. He dies for the sins of the rebellious. His death reconciles everything in the broken world to God. But miraculously, Jesus was raised from the dead to bring new life and to initiate a New Creation.
Part 4: Wonder Again
That’s when Part 4 begins. In gold embossed letters, Part 4 starts with an interesting quote: “Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, the new creation has come: The old has gone, the new is here!” (2 Corinthians 5:17).
I find chapters of God remaking the world. There are stories about famous people, like Paul and Peter, but there are even more about people I’ve never heard of. There are stories of new believers submitting their lives to Jesus Christ.
And there are interwoven stories of how these Christians work together, hand-in-hand with others in the Church, to bring new creation into their workplaces, their neighborhoods, their cities. And they, like John the Baptist, are preparing the way of the Lord all over again. They are living lives of restoration in preparation for the Second Advent.
My seemingly insignificant story is there, on page 758, connected with other seemingly insignificant stories. But they intertwine to make quite a magnificent story.
And as I look, I see something truly amazing: This chapter is actually being written as I look upon it. Stories are coming to life right before my eyes. This chapter has not yet been finished!
Part 5: Second Advent
I know it’s cheating to turn to the end of a book to see how it ends, but I can’t help myself! I turn to Part 5 and find that the Christ Jesus does indeed return! I see that God restores the Creation, making a New Heavens and New Earth. I see God coming down to dwell with humanity. And the people of God who were living in preparation for the Second Advent are resurrected from the dead just like Jesus was and rewarded with eternal life with God. I see a big party, like a wedding feast.
And this chapter, somehow, never ends. The people of God continue their lives on the New Earth, working and playing, enjoying the deepest of relationships, and directly worshiping God who is with them. I see chapter after chapter of joy and rejoicing.
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Where do your personal story and your church’s story fit into this grand story?
The larger story brings meaning to our smaller stories. Our stories are integral to making the whole story. When we forget this, making the story centering on me and what I want and what I’m doing, my life drifts away from what’s important. The huge story orients us so that we can take part fully in what God is writing.