| He
instead seems to relate it to the ideology of restoration, redemption, and wholeness. I have a confession
to make. I watch Extreme Makeover Home Edition. I'm not really into the
whole Trading Spaces genre, and I won't bore you with how I wound up watching
this show for the first time, but believe me, this is out of character for me.
Even so, as a follower of Jesus, I'm fascinated by it. First
of all, it is a metaphor for redemption. They don't level these rundown houses
and start over. They redeem the existing structure into something much grander
than any observer could have imagined. Secondly,
I have another confession to make. I have teared up at the end of every single
episode I have seen. This show targets the downtrodden; people who's lives have
fallen apart. It intentionally lifts up those people who life has beaten down.
I've never seen any of the design team or the producers of the show make any claims
of Christianity, but what they do "looks like Jesus". In
addition, 9 times out of 10, the people who are helped wind up thanking/praising
God at the end of the show! That is fascinating to me. Nowhere in the show is
God mentioned until the end when most of the people being helped recognize His
hand. It makes
me wonder about the church. One of the reasons that I tear up is because I keep
thinking "shouldn't the church be doing stuff like that?" Maybe if we
devoted more time to really lifting up the downtrodden and the brokenhearted,
they might recognize the hand of God more readily than if we keep trying to shove
dogma down their throats. -Adam
Ellis Discuss
this article on our Christian
message forum.  | The Real Heaven "What
will Heaven be like?" Have you ever wondered? Do
you want to know what the Bible means when it talks about "the New Earth"
and "the Kingdom of Heaven?" If
so, Lee Wilson and Joe Beam have teamed up to provide a fast-paced, exciting book
on Heaven and the afterlife. [...More
information] |
|