Thursday - June 6, 2024
SCRIPTURE
1 Samuel 4. 5-7
As soon as the Ark of the Covenant of the Lord came into the camp, all Israel gave a mighty shout, so that the earth resounded. And when the Philistines heard the noise of the shouting, they said, “What does this great shouting in the camp of the Hebrews mean?” And when they learned that the Ark of the Lord had come to the camp, the Philistines were afraid, for they said, “A god has come into the camp.”
WORDS OF HOPE
Years before I ever saw one of my favorite movies of all time, I was a geek for lore about the Ark of the Covenant. The movie, as you have probably guessed, was Raiders of the Lost Ark, and I was flush with anticipation to see one of my favorite Star Wars actors starring in a movie about one of my favorite Bible legends. I was certain the filmmakers would have spent even more time than I had researching every Ark passage that even remotely related to the most famous of Holy objects. They had not.
The anticipation was grueling. After Harrison Ford had triumphed through more perils than the Roadrunner had ever escaped from the Coyote, finally it was time in the movie to reveal the Ark itself. He and his sidekick had inserted the carrying poles into the rings of the Ark which was still hidden in a stone crypt. “That’s right,” I thought. “To touch the Ark itself would mean sudden death.” Finally, the dark cave began to be bathed in a dramatic golden glow as the emerging Cherubim of the seat of God began to peek out of their hiding place….but wait! “Those aren’t Cherubim! They’re kneeling Anglo-Saxon-looking angels!”
“Everyone knows,” I thought, “that the Cherubim on top of the Ark are creatures with the head of a woman, body of a lion, and wings of an eagle!” They were composite mythical beasts similar to an Egyptian Sphinx! This was only one of the inaccuracies I counted throughout the rest of the movie; too many to mention here.
Yet, I still count this as one of my favorite movies. I had entered it expecting documentary-level perfection, was shocked it had not lived up to my standards, but still left it feeling fulfilled. It had achieved its purpose. It gave me a good time. The cheering audience reminded me that was why we were at the theater in the first place.
My attitude before the film began was one many people carry with them when they first enter a church service; expectations of perfection according to their own pre-conceived definitions. Then, maybe they look around and see people that they feel are not dressed properly for church or hear an announcement for an event that sounds unorthodox. Their discomfort increases until, somewhere in the middle of a phrase in the sermon or a verse in a hymn, they have one of those Philistine experiences mentioned in today’s reading. They think, “God has come into this camp.” I have known this to happen at the Cathedral of Hope more times than I can count.
Perfection is often the gage we carry in our own minds, defined only by our personal unspoken parameters. Considering this, it is a near-impossible condition. After a few years of life have taught us that lesson, we can relax and leave an imperfect movie perfectly entertained or an imperfect church perfectly churched.
PRAYER
Thank you for the imperfections in this life. They remind us that perfection exists only in you. May your standard be our only guide. Amen
DEVOTION AUTHOR
Dan Peeler
Order of St. Francis and St. Clare
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