The challenge is always that in surrounding ourselves with more and more beautiful and pleasurable things, we will find ourselves drawn into their pursuit more and more. This pursuit drives us further and further away from encountering God, receiving His grace and love and turning around and giving it where it is needed. In these cases, the ‘beauty of the house’ detracts from the preparation of the banquet and the process of extending the banquet to the streets.
One might say that a person who lives according to the gospel and communes in a full relationship with Christ takes what they receive and CREATES BEAUTY. A person who lives according to the flesh, seeking out what is pleasurable and noble to their own sensibilities is CONSUMING BEAUTY.
When these two groups are equal in a parish setting, the offset equilibrium accommodates the existence of both – I speculate that most parishes fit into this category:
When those who create beauty outnumber those who consume, ministry grows by leaps and bounds:
When those who consume beauty outnumber those who create it, a community becomes cannibalistic and ultimately implodes:
What can be done with a community that exists in this last category? The pastor must strive – must fight if necessary – to put the primacy of knowledge and application of the gospel to the forefront of his ministry. There is no other way to break the addiction to pleasure, and there are many who will not be broken, but in many cases those who refuse to read or listen to the gospel are often the same who are marginally satisfied with church anyway – they derive greater pleasures for less cost elsewhere.
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© 2006 Jacob Gorny