Senior Pastor, Steve Thulson |
Remember the classic sitcom “I love
Lucy”? At least on really old TV re-runs?
One evening, Lucy’s husband Desi comes
home from work and finds her on hands and knees scanning the living room
carpet. When he asks “What are you doing?” she explains: “I’m looking for my
earrings.” He’s puzzled. “Don’t you keep them in the bedroom?” “Yeah” she says,
“but in here the light is better.”
I can’t say I’ve ever searched for lost
earrings, but I’ve done plenty of looking. What gets lost for me ranges from my
favorite coffee cup to letting Jesus be my strength for a life in his love.
Sometimes – especially when it comes to
looking for what matters most in life – I’m
looking in places where I’ll never find what I need and want.
Why
do I look there? Because there “the
light is better.”
Down deep I assume that the solutions to my
problems are what I (or others helping me) can understand, manage, and fix. The
“better light” for finding lost peace might be getting more money, getting more
safety, or getting more liked by others. For a group like our church, we might
assume that what’s needed will we be found where we have the “light” of certain
programs, traditions, policies, or events.
Could
it be that what is most lost is in some other place?
Like the depths of our hearts? Could it
be that what alone can show the way is some other light? Like a dark place of
loss called Golgotha?
What if the greatest of losses – every
single one we endure – can there be
drawn into the THE Light of an empty tomb, into “the life that is truly life”?
It’s worth looking there, don’t you
think?
(P.S. I never watched all that much of “Lucy.”
I found the story in a good little book on organizational health by Patrick
Lencioni, The Advantage, page 6.)