Thursday, February 20, 2014

Catalysts of Change

How much have things really changed in the last 400 years?

Quite a lot.

Cities have grown larger.

Buildings are certainly much taller.

We have electronic computers that process data faster than ever and hold ever increasing amounts of it.

We have air travel and can find ourselves on the other side of the world in a matter of hours.

With cell phones, people are now more connected than ever before.

Yes, things have changed a great deal in the last 400 years.

Yet how much have people changed, generally speaking, in that same 400 years?

In reality, not much.

Corruption still exists.

Crime has certainly not gone away.

War, it seems, is a constant reality.

Having made my point, I will stop my list there.

Although things have changed dramatically in the last four centuries, we are still facing many of the same problems as people did then.

We have even managed to create some new ones along the way.

That is one of the reasons I am so glad that in the class I teach we are studying “The Labyrinth of the World and the Paradise of the Heart” by John Amos Comenius who wrote this classic in the 1600's.

It is just as relevant today as when it was written.

In this classic, Comenius depicts the world as a labyrinth or maze full of twists, turns and deceptions.

When his main character, a pilgrim, finishes his tour of the Labyrinth of the World, he is distraught because the world offers no happiness and ultimately death itself..

Then my bowels quaked, my whole body trembled, and, terrified, I fell swooning to the ground, and cried mournfully : " Oh, most miserable, wretched, unhappy mankind ! this, then, is your last glory ! this the conclusion of your many splendid deeds ! this the term of your learning and much wisdom over which you glory so greatly ! this the rest and repose that you crave after countless labours and struggles ! this the immortality for which you ever hope ! Oh, that I had never been born, never passed through the gate of life! For after the many vanities of the world ; nothing but darkness and horror are my part ! O God, God, God ! God, if Thou art a God, have mercy on wretched me ! "

All however, is not lost, for then he encounters Jesus and finds the Paradise of the Heart.

Hearing such speech, and understanding that He who spake was my Redeemer, Jesus Christ, of whom I had indeed heard somewhat in the world, but superficially only, I folded my hands, and then stretched them out, not, as in the world, with fear and doubt, but with full happiness and complete faith ; then I said : " I am here, my Lord Jesus ; take me to Thee. Thine I wish to be, and to remain for ever. Speak to Thy servant, and permit me to hear Thee ; tell me what Thou desirest, and grant that I find pleasure in it ; lay on me what burden Thou thinkest fit, and grant that I may bear it ; employ me for whatever purpose Thou desirest, and grant me that I may not be found wanting ; order me to act according to Thy will, and grant me grace to do so. Let me be nothing, that Thou mayest be everything."

This is the turning point for the pilgrim, for it is then that Christ tells him that, for a time, he must reside in two worlds at the same time.

As believers, so do we.

We may not be able to change the world, but with His help we may be the catalyst of change for some of its people.

Our task remains the same.

We are to introduce people to Jesus.

It is He who will forever change them.

Blessings,
Jim Pokorny
The Other Brother Jim

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