Showing posts with label love. Show all posts
Showing posts with label love. Show all posts

Monday, July 7, 2014

The Return?

4 years ago, well, nearly 5, I wrote this post: http://dulacian.blogspot.com/2010/12/and-back-again.html#!/2010/12/and-back-again.html

I thought it'd be pertinent to revisit it, on what's looking more and more like the eve of LeBron's return. 

I can't say I ever thought I'd see the day- there's proof right there of that. 

http://dulacian.blogspot.com/search/2012/01/recognize.html

About two years ago, I wrote the one above. 

And now it's all coming back to something new, different, and yet, old. 

Or maybe it's not. 

I'm not even sure how I'd feel.  I'd be happy.  Cleveland would be contending.  A prodigal son would return a grown man.  Winning without him would always have been the way we wanted to do it- but if he comes back now, it's so largely going to be because of his family.  That's a big part of what it means to be Cleveland- family. 

I've never been to Miami.  The closest I've been is Savannah, Georgia geographically, and New York City metro-size wise.  I don't think you could just combine the two and get Miami, so I have no context. 

But I've lived in Cleveland for 3 years and Ohio my whole life.  Forgetting where you came from isn't an option, and I don't think it ever was for LeBron either. 

But he's not officially back yet.  I'm not sure when or even, yet, if he will be. 

I'll be elated, but things won't be what they were when he left.  Nothing's ever going to take us back to those days.

And maybe that's a good thing.
-Zack

Thursday, April 1, 2010

L38: Together

"No one claimed any of their possessions as their own"
"They had all things in common"
"What you do to the least of these, you do to me"

Thanks to a Wooster education and a set of key experiences, I'm more opposed to most forms of individualism than most these days.  That definitely isn't where I was when I got to college, but to say those are 4 formative years is an understatement.  Even, I think, if you come through college thinking most of the same things you come to college thinking, there's growth that happens by being around others and engaging thoughts, new or not, on a deeper level.

But I'm not trying to write about college right here.

There is real value in community and most especially community that is knit together in understanding and love, able to be transformative and transform the members of the community.  But it starts in love and it grows people together.

I don't understand exactly how all of Jesus works into the atonement framework of most theologians.  I know we're saved by grace through his sacrifice and it's the greatest form of love. But if that were 100% of the story, Jesus wouldn't have been here for so long.  He wouldn't have come and walked among us.  The rough and ready gospel just says he lived a perfect life, died, and rose from the dead.  I don't see any stipulation on that life except that it was sinless.  Maybe though, it was more than sinless, or, that is to say, that sinlessness is but part, and maybe but a small part of perfection.  Jesus came and calls people, me, you, us, to a life in which we give up things that are our own in response to God's love for us.  But he doesn't just say to hand them over and let them be abandoned.  Giving up self, in Jesus' terms, involves doing so for the good of others...other people.  Something about his perfect life knits people together on a truer, deeper, more sincere level.  That's the life I want.  I do not want to sin, but given the choice, I would rather struggle in a loving community than purify myself of all sin and be utterly alone.  If Jesus' life is any indicator, perhaps that would be a sin itself.



-Zack

"It's a sad situation when we have to resort to keyboards as a means of making relations"
-Gym Class Heroes