TRUST the STORY
Credit
 me with this: I’m not talking about the nonsense we can see so much of 
in the movies or on the television! I’m talking about the well 
thought-out, well-written and well-acted dramas that there’s plenty of 
if we’re able and willing to tolerate some material in them that’s 
distasteful. [How much and what that is you’ll have to work out for 
yourself.]
We’re
 all gripped by such stories; our emotions are stirred; we make inner 
vows as we identify with the heroes we feel like applauding and we rage 
at the villains as they set our teeth on edge. We often speak to one 
another about such stories—I don’t doubt for a moment that’s part of the
 pleasure—we can’t keep quiet while the images continue to burn in us.
We
 feel satisfaction when the rogue finally gets “what’s coming to him.” 
[I’m not talking vindictiveness—a hunger for fairness is not the same as
 spite or vindictiveness though, of course, we’re capable of the worst, 
aren’t we?] There’s something about even a single case of fairness 
shining through that lifts our hearts and triggers a hunger for a world 
filled with such fairness.
But
 it’s often more than that, is it not! Sometimes it acts as a promise 
and assurance; it’s as if life won’t let us believe that lies are 
forever, that evil is all there is and all there will be. Every now and 
then when we see the oppressed vindicated and we’re thrilled to watch 
and listen to their joy fully restored, every now and then an actual 
event seems to whisper, a great story that has stayed in touch with 
reality and life seems to whisper: “Yes, do smile, do rejoice, don’t 
feel foolish, believe in happy endings—a day is coming when that is all 
you’ll see and hear; joy without end.
Great
 literature, great movies and dramas send out the same message. They may
 be fiction, it’s true but “fiction” that reaches down into the deep 
places in us and stays around for years is not based on “fiction”—it’s 
based on the very best that’s in us—and the very best that’s in us is 
there by the grace and work of God; there, via all the ways that He who 
loves us ceaselessly and relentlessly works it in us and leading us to 
believe even when we don’t really believe or maybe we presently don’t want
 to believe; and yet, we wish we did [just as Steven Weinberg, 
theoretical physicist and atheist, wistfully confessed that at times he 
wishes he could still believe that the heavens declare the glory of God 
and the sky shows his handiwork—Psalm 19].
I
 meant to say and got a bit sidetracked, when we see such an event, 
watch such a movie or read such a story we don’t need people to spell it
 all out for us in an overload of detail. A glorious event clearly seen,
 a great story well told has its own power without others micromanaging 
our thoughts and feelings about it. If Hollywood [now and then], if 
creative writers and story-tellers are able to imagine wonderful things,
 speak of things that reach us in the depths of our beings and in doing 
so move us so—if they can do that with fiction why can’t ministers of 
“the gospel” do it with truth? 
If our truth is duller than fiction...?
If our truth is duller than fiction...?
Perhaps
 we will come to trust the Story to work its lovely magic in human 
hearts [Acts 20:32] and we’ll dispense with the eternal micromanaging 
with the same banal moralizing. If that should happen maybe people will 
come to believe that we who preach really believe what we’re saying 
about the glorious gospel and they will begin to believe it and find 
themselves inspired and liberated. Who knows, maybe they will begin to 
tell it to others.

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