The Enemy of the Good Life

Romans 7:14-25

14 For we know that the law is spiritual, but I am of the flesh, sold into slavery under sin. 15 I do not understand my own actions. For I do not do what I want, but I do the very thing I hate. 16 Now if I do what I do not want, I agree that the law is good. 17 But in fact it is no longer I who do it but sin that dwells within me. 18 For I know that the good does not dwell within me, that is, in my flesh. For the desire to do the good lies close at hand, but not the ability. 19 For I do not do the good I want, but the evil I do not want is what I do. 20 Now if I do what I do not want, it is no longer I who do it but sin that dwells within me.

21 So I find it to be a law that, when I want to do what is good, evil lies close at hand. 22 For I delight in the law of God in my inmost self, 23 but I see in my members another law at war with the law of my mind, making me captive to the law of sin that dwells in my members. 24 Wretched person that I am! Who will rescue me from this body of death? 25 Thanks be to God through Jesus Christ our Lord!

So then, with my mind I am enslaved to the law of God, but with my flesh I am enslaved to the law of sin.

This has always been one of the most relatable passages for me from Paul.  This stream of consciousness rant about the frustrations he has with his own flesh and sin that dwells within him.  It’s like Paul plagiarized my journal.

I think we can all relate to Paul in this passage.  If we look at our lives closely enough we can come up with circumstances where we knew what we should have done or said, but we went and did the opposite.  We felt a pull to respond graciously in an encounter where we were wronged or slighted, overlooked or not considered, but a stronger pull bites back and we return what was served to us rather than turn the other cheek.  Or our resolve to care better for our physical bodies ends a day of healthy choices with a whole carton of ice cream because we just can’t resist anymore.

We try really hard to do the right thing but something in us drags us away.  Our own effort can only get us so far.  It’s like we’re chained to something and we ourselves don’t have the key to break free no matter how hard we try.

This is the imagery Paul uses in this passage.  Paul asks, “Who will rescue me from this body of death?”  In ancient times, Kings could sentence prisoners to be chained to a dead body as their punishment.  This convict would be forced to drag around, sleep beside, eat next to, a decaying, rotting corpse, always reminded of the wrong they did.

This may seem like overkill, to make this kind of an analogy in his letter, and it’s possible he wasn’t making a reference to this practice, just calling his own body and flesh nature one that is subject to death and dying (this is how the NIV translates this verse).

But I actually quite liked this word picture because it resonates.

Sometimes I feel like my flesh, my sin nature is like a rotting corpse I’m dragging around everywhere.  But more than just some dead body lifelessly hanging off of me, it’s more like a zombie version of me, chained to my ankle.  It’s alive but not really alive.  It does what it wants and is utterly controlled by basal desires. It pulls on the chain seeking the fulfillment of its own will.

As I go about my life, its stench wafts through the room with every self-centered decision, its weight pulls me away from where I want to be with every impatient response or unkind word spoken to a loved one, it moans aloud and tries my patience when I seek space and quiet time with God.

No matter how good I want to be, this rotting, old flesh gets in the way.  I am ashamed of it, I want to move past it, I don’t want to be reminded of it, but it follows me.

When I lash out and try to subdue it in my own strength, it fights me back.  I find myself saying along with Paul, “Wretched person that I am! Who will rescue me from this body of death?” because no matter how hard I try, I can’t break the chain myself.

And just as I reach the same realization as Paul, I reach the same conclusion as him too…it’s only through Jesus and his power that I can be freed from this unholy trinity of flesh, sin, and death.

When it’s me just wanting to be better and do better, I cannot overcome the weight of my flesh, at least not indefinitely.  I am easily worn out and worn down when I try to be good in my own strength.  But when I invite Jesus into the process, when I ask him to lead me and to loosen the grip and lessen the weight of this body of death, it does become lighter, more manageable.

I don’t think our bodies of death will ever be completely gone this side of Jesus’s return, but if we let him, he will share the load.  He will cover us in his grace and take on the weight of our dead flesh if we accept it.

This is usually my stumbling block…letting Jesus bear the weight of my flesh and sin.  He already did it on the cross, but I have this picture in my head that I have to wrangle and carry this rotting flesh myself, that it’s my zombie so it’s my responsibility, but Jesus asks me to put it down.  To bring it to him and stop trying to get everything together on my own so I feel worthy.

I am already worthy because God adopted me as his own.  He has already accepted me as his child.  He loves me, zombie companion and all, and he knows that this zombie companion is part of my walk in this life and he’s here to help me with her.  

I can’t and don’t need to take care of her on my own, I just need to trust him.  That he means what he says and that what he taught in his time on Earth was true.  That seeking the kingdom means I’ll find it (Matthew 7:7), that I have the Holy Spirit living in me to guide me (John 16:13), and that I will never be alone (Matthew 28:20).  

I can learn to trust him through the stories of others, like Paul who struggled with his flesh and came to the conclusion that Jesus was the only one who could free him (Romans 7:24-25).  And Paul again who said inviting the Holy Spirit into my thoughts and work and actions means I will see the fruit of the Spirit in my life rather than the evidence of the flesh, aka be led by my zombie self (Galatians 5).

The enemy of the Good Life is a life lived under the power of death – a life where the zombie version of us is in the driver’s seat, one where our sin nature, our flesh, dictates our choices and actions.  When we are led by the desires of flesh, we sin and this sin leads to death (Romans 6:23), maybe not immediate physical death, but a zombie-like existence where we’re breathing but not really alive.  A life run by fear and survival rather than peace and thriving.

Choosing to pursue the Good Life means no longer allowing the zombie to lead, or fighting her on our own, or just trying to ignore her, but turning to Jesus, asking for his help to free us from what we are chained to, to join him in the resurrection he made possible through his own death, so that we too can be pulled from death into new life, into the Good Life.

What Is Our Summum Bonum?

The great Christian theologian and philosopher, Augustine of Hippo, once quipped, “It is the decided opinion of everyone who uses their brain, that all people desire to be happy.” It seems a rather dull observation when you think about it. Who doesn’t want to be happy? Why would anyone desire a sad, miserable life? But Augustine points this out not to be Captain Obvious, but to direct us to the all important question we too often fail to ask: “What is it that we ought to desire that will bring us the happiness we all wish we could have?”

The classical name given as the answer to this question is the summum bonum, which is Latin for the “highest” or “ultimate good.” Simply put, the summum bonum is that which we ought to desire in order to be happy.

Of course, this begs the question, what is our summum bonum? What is this highest good that we ought to be desiring?

If you feel the overwhelming weight of this question then you’ll rightly recognize this isn’t a question we can just answer on our own based on our limited experience and knowledge. It seems like a question we could use some help with (to say the least) and in fact what we find throughout human history is that there has been a robust, ongoing conversation dedicated to this very question. It may not be readily evident to us today, but philosophy was originally designed as a discipline dedicated to providing resources around the question of our summum bonum as human beings. The entire philosophical project was about helping us wrap our minds around the massive question of how we can live towards that which will bring us true happiness.

What also may be lost to us today is that this is the question Jesus was most concerned with, as well. Contrary to popular belief, Jesus did not come to tell us how to get to heaven after we die. Rather, Jesus came to reveal to us what he believed was the answer to the question philosophers had been grappling with for centuries before his arrival. To put it succinctly, Jesus came to reveal to us what the good life is by showing us who God is.

This is the rich soil out of which the Christian life grows. To know who God is is the beginning of the good life because God is none other than our summon bonum. That is, God is our highest good, the ultimate end toward which our lives must be directed in order to find true happiness. In this way, the question of who we believe God to be is intimately and inextricably bound up with what we imagine the good life to be. To answer the question of who God is is to answer the question of what (or who) we ought to desire in order to be happy.

In the Christian faith there is God as God is revealed in the life, death and resurrection of Jesus and then there are all the pretenders. These pretenders are legion and go by many names. Idols and lowercase “g” gods in the Hebrew Scriptures. Caesar and Mammon in the Gospels. The Apostle Paul in his epistles prefers to name them as the “powers and principalities” which he sees as conduits of the greatest threat to our happiness – the devilish duo of Sin and Death.

The human condition as it is illuminated by the biblical narrative is that we are forever finding ourselves settling for the pretenders rather than the summon bonum. This condition is given the name idolatry in both the Old and New Testaments. The problem with idolatry is precisely a kind of settling that leaves us continually restless. And so our problem is not so much that we assent to a set of wrong beliefs, but that we entrust ourselves to things that, in the long run, will leave us empty and disappointed.

If we simply believe God to be a better option to Death or, in the worst forms of Christianity, just a better alternative to eternal conscious torment in hell, we are selling short the goodness of God revealed to us in the wisdom of the cross. The “trick” of Christianity, if we can call it that, is that faith comes to us because we find the person of God revealed in Jesus Christ to be so beautiful and so true that we cannot but help but believe in this God as our summum bonum, the greatest and ultimate good.

This is why so much of the Christian life comes down to worship. We worship what we have come to understand as our greatest good. This happens whether we are religious or not. As many have pointed out, the question is not whether you will worship, but who or what you will worship. And we can end up worshiping any number of “goods” that are constantly on display around us. The constant barrage of sound bites, images and video clips that bombard us on the daily, all promoting some good we should entertain. The work of Christian worship is to say that over and above all these competing goods our summum bonum is the God we find revealed in Jesus Christ and him crucified.

The life of faith is that life shaped and formed by the worship of this God who comes to us in the person of Christ through the work of the Spirit. Simply put, the good we worship is the good we become. This is the logic at work for us Christians as we pursue the life that is drawn ever more fully into the life of God, where true happiness is found in the one who is our summum bonum.

Lent 2024 | Week 6: JESUS

Every week on Sunday we will be posting a new set of reflection questions based on themes and areas of our lives that are important to look at on a deeper level. We hope this is a chance to take some time to look inward, to process, to ask intentional questions about your life and bring those reflections to God, asking him to show us what is going well and what might need to change.

The sixth area of life we are going to reflect on is Jesus.

Why Jesus: Reflecting on how we think of Jesus can give us a lot of insight into how we are doing spiritually.  Just as we can get into relational ruts with others, we can get into a relational rut with Jesus too if we allow the status quo to just keep us going.  Taking time to ask ourselves how things are going and how we are feeling about a certain relationship is a great health check to see if everything is going well or if some things might need to change.

Reflect: Here are some reflection questions to help you work through this topic.  Feel free to answer all of them or just some, and if you’re not sure of the answer, try journaling about why you’re not sure of it…it may just help you figure it out!  If you’re an extrovert or a verbal processor, try going through these questions with a friend!

  • Who do I picture Jesus to be?  What attributes do I associate with him?  What do I think his personality was like?
  • How connected or close to Jesus do I feel?  What do I think is causing that closeness or distance?
  • How do I think about Jesus’ dying on the cross?  Grateful? Ashamed? Questioning its necessity? Confused?
  • If Jesus was sitting right across from me now, what would I ask him or say to him?
  • What do I think Jesus would say back to me?
  • How do I think Jesus fits into the “good life” God wants for me?

Pray with me: Jesus, you are an important part of my life.  Show me where you want to meet me today.  Reveal to me your true self and strip away all the misconceptions I have of you.  Increase the intimacy of our relationship and open my heart to you.  Help me follow you in your way, everlasting. Amen.

Bonus: If you make it through the thematic list of journaling prompts this week and would like some more general ones to guide you, try some of these:

  • Am I noticing any changes in myself or my spiritual life as I journey through Lent?
  • What has been heavy on my heart or mind today?
  • How do I feel today? What am I worried about or excited for?
  • How do I need God to show up for me today? Is there anything I need to ask him for?
  • How have I seen God show up for me in the past?  What has he already done or been doing in my life?
  • What am I grateful for today?

Lent 2024 | Week 5: CHURCH

Every week on Sunday we will be posting a new set of reflection questions based on themes and areas of our lives that are important to look at on a deeper level. We hope this is a chance to take some time to look inward, to process, to ask intentional questions about your life and bring those reflections to God, asking him to show us what is going well and what might need to change.

The fifth area of life we are going to reflect on is church.

Why Church: Church with a capital “C” is the corporate body of believers around the world.  Church with a lowercase “c” is the specific community I worship God with at any given time.  The church is meant to be a reflection of the Church in a tangible way, a fellowship of believers coming together to encourage one another in the life God has given all of us on the earth in the here and now.  The Church and church, however, are imperfect places of imperfect people reflecting and sharing the love of God as best we can, however far we fall short.  Taking time to reflect on our experience of church, why we go, what we do there, what we receive and what we give to others, can help the Church move closer to a true reflection of God’s love and what he hopes we as his hands and feet can do in this world.

Reflection: Here are some reflection questions to help you work through this topic.  Feel free to answer all of them or just some, and if you’re not sure of the answer, try journaling about why you’re not sure of it…it may just help you figure it out!  If you’re an extrovert or a verbal processor, try going through these questions with a friend!

  • Why do I (or don’t I) go to church?
  • What do I think the point of church should be?  How do I think the church lacks these things?  What can I do to help change that?
  • How do I give to my church community?  
  • How do I receive from my church community?
  • How do I think church fits into the “good life” God wants for me?

Pray with me: God thank you for the body of believers here in this world.  Help me see my role and my part in this body, both as one that is cared for by it and also cares for it in return.  Give us wisdom and direction as your church to do your will in this world, loving others as you have loved us.  Amen.

Bonus: If you make it through the thematic list of journaling prompts this week and would like some more general ones to guide you, try some of these:

  • Am I noticing any changes in myself or my spiritual life as I journey through Lent?
  • What has been heavy on my heart or mind today?
  • How do I feel today? What am I worried about or excited for?
  • How do I need God to show up for me today? Is there anything I need to ask him for?
  • How have I seen God show up for me in the past?  What has he already done or been doing in my life?
  • What am I grateful for today?

Lent 2024 | Week 4: MIND

Every week on Sunday we will be posting a new set of reflection questions based on themes and areas of our lives that are important to look at on a deeper level. We hope this is a chance to take some time to look inward, to process, to ask intentional questions about your life and bring those reflections to God, asking him to show us what is going well and what might need to change.

The fourth area of life we are going to reflect on is our mind.

Why Our Mind: The things we think about and give our attention to matter.  For most of us, the majority of our thoughts will be about what we do for work, the thing we do to make a living.  Outside of that, though, how do we engage our mind?  God has made our minds a powerful thing – we have incredible imaginations and power to understand so much, therefore it is good to reflect on what we think about and how we choose to engage our mind with the world around us.

Reflection: Here are some reflection questions to help you work through this topic.  Feel free to answer all of them or just some, and if you’re not sure of the answer, try journaling about why you’re not sure of it…it may just help you figure it out!  If you’re an extrovert or a verbal processor, try going through these questions with a friend!

  • What do I spend the most time thinking about throughout my days, besides my occupation?  How do I feel about this?
  • What have I become an expert on?  What does my mind understand really well?
  • Is there anything I avoid thinking about too much because I don’t understand it or it overwhelms or confuses me?
  • Beyond my occupation or what I do for work, what do I like to do that engages my mind? How often do I get to do this thing/these things?
  • What is my favorite thing to make? It doesn’t have to be a physical product like art, food, or crafts…it could be written like essays or poetry, or a tool like spreadsheets or event plans.  What do you like to produce that’s helpful, good, or beautiful to you?
  • How do I think my mind and work fit into the “good life” God wants for me?

Pray with me:  Creator God, you have made us in your image as creative beings with powerful minds.  Help me use my mind and hone it.  Help me engage with the passions and interests you have given me.  Help me think about things that are true, noble, right, pure, lovely, admirable, excellent or praiseworthy (Phil 4:8).  Amen.

Bonus: If you make it through the thematic list of journaling prompts this week and would like some more general ones to guide you, try some of these:

  • Am I noticing any changes in myself or my spiritual life as I journey through Lent?
  • What has been heavy on my heart or mind today?
  • How do I feel today? What am I worried about or excited for?
  • How do I need God to show up for me today? Is there anything I need to ask him for?
  • How have I seen God show up for me in the past?  What has he already done or been doing in my life?
  • What am I grateful for today?

Lent 2024 | Week 3: PHYSICAL BODY

Every week on Sunday we will be posting a new set of reflection questions based on themes and areas of our lives that are important to look at on a deeper level. We hope this is a chance to take some time to look inward, to process, to ask intentional questions about your life and bring those reflections to God, asking him to show us what is going well and what might need to change.

The third area of life we are going to reflect on is our physical bodies.

Why Physical Bodies: Our bodies were formed by God, intentionally and with care.  We were created as physical beings that need food, rest, and exercise.  How we pay attention to our bodies (or not) greatly affects our life here on earth.  Therefore it is important to reflect on how we are caring for our bodies, how we are giving it what it needs and keeping it from what harms it.

Reflection: Here are some reflection questions to help you work through this topic.  Feel free to answer all of them or just some, and if you’re not sure of the answer, try journaling about why you’re not sure of it…it may just help you figure it out!  If you’re an extrovert or a verbal processor, try going through these questions with a friend!

  • Do I find it difficult to take care of my physical body? Why or why not?
  • Why do I eat what I eat?  Does what I eat energize me or weigh me down?
  • How much rest do I get? What does rest look like for me?
  • What is the most enjoyable type of physical activity for me? How often do I get to do this?
  • How often do I spend time outside?  How do I feel after I’ve spent time outside?
  • What might my physical body and health have to do with the “good life” God wants for me?

Pray with me: Lord, help me see my body as a gift from you that needs tender loving care and sometimes tough love as well.  Help me think of my physical self as just important as my spiritual and mental self.  Help me be intentional with what I do with my body and keep me from temptation and harmful things that keep me from the good life you want for me.  Amen.

Bonus: If you make it through the thematic list of journaling prompts this week and would like some more general ones to guide you, try some of these:

  • Am I noticing any changes in myself or my spiritual life as I journey through Lent?
  • What has been heavy on my heart or mind today?
  • How do I feel today? What am I worried about or excited for?
  • How do I need God to show up for me today? Is there anything I need to ask him for?
  • How have I seen God show up for me in the past?  What has he already done or been doing in my life?
  • What am I grateful for today?

Lent 2024 | Week 2: COMMUNITY

Every week on Sunday we will be posting a new set of reflection questions based on themes and areas of our lives that are important to look at on a deeper level. We hope this is a chance to take some time to look inward, to process, to ask intentional questions about your life and bring those reflections to God, asking him to show us what is going well and what might need to change.

The second area of life we are going to reflect on is community.

Why Community: We do not live in isolation.  We live in a world surrounded by other human beings, most are strangers, some are friends.  The people we choose to spend our time with and our energy thinking about have major effects on us and how we encounter the world.  It is good, therefore, to take time to reflect on these communities we have built.  To get curious about how they affect us.  To get intentional about who we surround ourselves with on a regular basis.

Reflection: Here are some reflection questions to help you work through this topic.  Feel free to answer all of them or just some, and if you’re not sure of the answer, try journaling about why you’re not sure of it…it may just help you figure it out!  If you’re an extrovert or a verbal processor, try going through these questions with a friend!

  • Who do I spend most of my time with? Does spending time with this person/these people fill me? Edify me? Agitate me? Draw me closer to or further from God?
  • What do I tend to do with other people?  Why?
  • Is there something I wish I did with others that I could start doing or do more of?
  • Is there something I do with others that I need a break from – it takes up too much time/energy/doesn’t bring me closer to the “good life” God wants for me?

Pray with me: Lord, you have created this world full of people.  Show me the ones you have called into my life for a purpose and show me those that I may need to take some space from for a time.  You have given us the gift of community, of togetherness.  Please inspire me as to what this can look life in this life you have given me.  Amen.

Bonus: If you make it through the thematic list of journaling prompts this week and would like some more general ones to guide you, try some of these:

  • Am I noticing any changes in myself or my spiritual life as I journey through Lent?
  • What has been heavy on my heart or mind today?
  • How do I feel today? What am I worried about or excited for?
  • How do I need God to show up for me today? Is there anything I need to ask him for?
  • How have I seen God show up for me in the past?  What has he already done or been doing in my life?
  • What am I grateful for today?

Lent 2024 | Week 1: TIME

Welcome to CK’s Lent Journey for 2024! The past few years our church has been looking at Lent through the lens of taking on certain practices with the intention of letting go of other things in our lives that distract or detract from our lives with God. This year, one of the practices we are recommending for Lent is reflection, whether that is by journaling or through talking with a trusted friend.

Every week on Sunday we will be posting a new set of reflection questions based on themes and areas of our lives that are important to look at on a deeper level. We hope this is a chance to take some time to look inward, to process, to ask intentional questions about your life and bring those reflections to God, asking him to show us what is going well and what might need to change.

The first area of life we are going to reflect on is time.

Why Time: Our days are marked by time.  When we do things, what order we do them in, how much we are able to do, all depends on time and how we have ordered our day.  It is important, therefore, to stop and reflect on how we spend our time.  Our days are a gift from God and we choose how to fill them.  Let’s take some time to reflect on our time and how we spend it and why we spend it the way we do.

Reflection: Here are some reflection questions to help you work through this topic.  Feel free to answer all of them or just some, and if you’re not sure of the answer, try journaling about why you’re not sure of it…it may just help you figure it out!  If you’re an extrovert or a verbal processor, try going through these questions with a friend!

  • Why do I wake up when I wake up? Why do I go to sleep when I go to sleep?
  • What do I do when I have free time?
  • Write out a typical schedule of your day, what takes up the most time? The least? Is this the ranking you want to see? What could change and how would it change?
  • Is there anything I spend my time doing that doesn’t draw me towards the “good life” that I think God wants for me? What is it?

Pray with me: Lord, you have given me my days and the time each one brings me to do and be.  Guide me through my days and the decisions I make on how to spend them.  Give me wisdom to know what can and should be done and what needs to be left for another time.  Lead me towards good things to fill my time and away from things that are not. Amen.

Bonus: If you make it through the thematic list of journaling prompts this week and would like some more general ones to guide you, try some of these:

  • What hopes do I have for growth in my spiritual life as I journey through Lent?
  • What has been heavy on my heart or mind today?
  • How do I feel today? What am I worried about or excited for?
  • How do I need God to show up for me today? Is there anything I need to ask him for?
  • How have I seen God show up for me in the past?  What has he already done or been doing in my life?
  • What am I grateful for today?

An Unexpected Grace

“To die to our neighbors means to stop judging them, to stop evaluating them, and thus to become free to be compassionate. Compassion can never coexist with judgment because judgment creates the distance, the distinction, which prevents us from really being with the other.” – Henri J.M. Nouwen

End Slavery: +814292.09

The Good Place is a television series that revolves around the concept of the afterlife. According to the show, humans are sent to either the Good Place or the Bad Place after they die. During their lifetime, every human is assigned a numerical score that is based on their actions. Only those with the highest scores are deemed worthy of entering the Good Place, where they are rewarded with eternal happiness.

“The Good Place” is not your run-of-the-mill comedy show. It delves into impressive philosophical themes and offers a unique perspective on judgment. The show explores the concept of retributive justice, which suggests that the destiny of all rational beings is determined by their good and bad deeds.

Judgment

noun

  1. the ability to make considered decisions or come to a conclusion.
  2. A misfortune or calamity. Viewed as punishment.

During a conversation with Ken, a few weeks ago, he shared an interesting perspective. He explained that “as Christians, we commonly assume that judgment only comes at the end. We believe that we receive grace first and are then judged at the end”. However, Ken emphasized that this is not the case. “In reality, judgment comes first, and then we are always being judged; that is how we are able to receive grace.” That is, grace is always “despite” and not “because of” our human condition (Karl Barth).

The parable of the Prodigal Son illustrates the dynamics of judgment, grace, and human relationships. While it is often portrayed as a story about God’s love, its central theme revolves around our interactions with each other.

Perspective Taking: The Prodigal Son

What I’m about to say is subjective and my own opinion, but I think we often live and judge ourselves, others, and events either in the past, present, or future in our headspace as rational creatures.

  1. Past – guilt, shame, regret, dwelling on what happened, replaying events or conversations, over analyzing.
  2. Present – clarity, acceptance, joy of being, understanding, inner peace, gratitude.
  3. Future – fear of the unknown, worrying about what could happen, feeling anxious for what is to come, ‘what if’ scenarios.

I am not saying that being in any particular headspace is either good or bad, but I believe that the following list is useful in understanding what shapes and evaluates our lives in the world today. For instance, if we view the narrative of the Prodigal Son through the lens of past, present, and future, we can gain deeper insight into the characters and their motivations within the story.

17 “When he came to his senses, he said, ‘How many of my father’s hired servants have food to spare, and here I am starving to death! 18 I will set out and go back to my father and say to him: Father, I have sinned against heaven and against you. 19 I am no longer worthy to be called your son; make me like one of your hired servants.’ 20 So he got up and went to his father.
“But while he was still a long way off, his father saw him and was filled with compassion for him; he ran to his son, threw his arms around him and kissed him.
21 “The son said to him, ‘Father, I have sinned against heaven and against you. I am no longer worthy to be called your son.’
22 “But the father said to his servants, ‘Quick! Bring the best robe and put it on him. Put a ring on his finger and sandals on his feet. 23 Bring the fattened calf and kill it. Let’s have a feast and celebrate. 24 For this son of mine was dead and is alive again; he was lost and is found.’ So they began to celebrate.
25 “Meanwhile, the older son was in the field. When he came near the house, he heard music and dancing. 26 So he called one of the servants and asked him what was going on. 27 ‘Your brother has come,’ he replied, ‘and your father has killed the fattened calf because he has him back safe and sound.’
28 “The older brother became angry and refused to go in. So his father went out and pleaded with him. 29 But he answered his father, ‘Look! All these years I’ve been slaving for you and never disobeyed your orders. Yet you never gave me even a young goat so I could celebrate with my friends. 30 But when this son of yours who has squandered your property with prostitutes comes home, you kill the fattened calf for him!’
31 “‘My son,’ the father said, ‘you are always with me, and everything I have is yours. 32 But we had to celebrate and be glad, because this brother of yours was dead and is alive again; he was lost and is found.’”

Luke 15:11-32 (NIV)

We see that the younger son is experiencing something close to depression and anxiety when he reunites with his father. Believing and acknowledging the judgment he placed on himself and believing in the possibility of his father’s wrath was justified. However, the father is a glimpse of a character who is mindful of the deep hurt, damaged trust, and wound that his son did to him, but he also sees someone taking ownership, and anything but forgiveness doesn’t make sense.

To emphasize the humanity of the Prodigal Son parable, we can turn to the season 1 finale of Ted Lasso to observe Rebecca and Ted in action.

‘You…What? Why?’

At the beginning of season 1, Rebecca hires Ted Lasso to coach the Richmond team, intending to take them down to get back at her ex-husband for hurting her. As the audience, we walk with Rebecca as she begins to sabotage Ted at every possibility and as her humanity begins to come out.

Ted, also going through a divorce, can understand and share Rebecca’s pain and forgive her. Despite the damage caused by the hurt and loss of trust, he recognizes that she is taking responsibility for her actions. This empathy is the outcome that we observe.

An Unexpected Beginning

“The Birth of Christ is the eucatastrophe of Man’s history.” – J.R.R. Tolkien

Concerning J.R.R. Tolkien

If you were to open The Lord of the Rings and step into Middle-earth, you would be transported to a realm beyond your wildest imagination. Although beautiful and fantastical, the characters and themes in the text are distinctly human.

J.R.R. Tolkien’s literary works have profoundly impacted the fantasy genre as we know it today. His story spans over a thousand pages and is widely considered one of the greatest of our time. Critics and readers alike have pointed out the numerous Christian allegories embedded in his work. He once wrote to the English Roman Catholic theologian, Father Robert Murray, calling The Lord of the Rings “a fundamentally religious and Catholic work; unconsciously so at first, but consciously in the revision.” However, Tolkien himself disliked the idea of allegory. He believed his work’s applicability to readers was more important than any intended allegory. He understood that the meaning and interpretation of his work were ultimately up to the reader.

In Tolkien’s essay “On Fairy-Stories,” he explores his views on the role of imagination and deep consideration for escapism in fictional stories. He argues that “escapism” is healthy and necessary as long as readers are not abandoning their responsibilities. In other words, the type often misunderstood as the only type of escapism is when the reader uses the story to ignore his duties in life and disappear into a fantasy world. However, for Tolkien, well-written fantasy and escapism literature can only enhance the readers’ view of their everyday world. Stories are meant to immerse us in a reality that points to an ultimate truth. Walter Wangerin Jr. once wrote, “To comprehend the experience one is living in, he must, by imagination and intellect, be lifted out of it.”

A Good Catastrophe

On August 6, 1945, during World War II, an American B-29 bomber dropped the world’s first deployed atomic bomb over the Japanese city of Hiroshima. The explosion immediately killed an estimated 80,000 people and tens of thousands more later due to radiation exposure.

On January 12, 2010, a 7.0 magnitude earthquake struck Haiti, leaving its capital Port-au-Prince devastated. About 220,000 people were reportedly killed.

On December 26, 2004, a 9.1-9.3 magnitude earthquake off the west coast of Sumatra, Indonesia, ruptured, and approximately 230,000 people died in the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami.

Catastrophe comes from the Greek word “overturn” or “any sudden disaster.” It names a momentous tragic event ranging from extreme misfortune to utter destruction. It is a circumstance that disrupts our lives—an interruption to human life’s existing activity and progress.

Tolkien believed that an event that is a catastrophe can be a surprise and fortune-reversing but with a happy ending. To describe this, he used the Greek word eu-the Greek prefix simply meaning good. Thus, Tolkien coined a word that would help describe and explain the understanding and power of stories derived from the real world – eucatastrophe. Eucatastrophe describes the fortunate turn of events—an unexpected and sudden good during dire situations.

The showdown in Star Wars: Episode IV – A New Hope is an excellent example of eucatastrophe. The Rebel Alliance faces destruction as the Galactic Empire has found its military operations on the moon base of Yavin 4. The Death Star’s superlaser can destroy a planet, and the Rebel Alliance has only one chance to stop it. They send their fighter pilots to shoot proton torpedoes into the Death Star’s reactor core, causing a chain reaction that can destroy the giant battle station. Darth Vader and a couple of tie fighters are shooting down the Rebel Alliance’s pilots, and Luke has a one-in-a-million shot. The unexpected destruction of the Death Star through Luke’s shot is a moment of eucatastrophe that saves the Rebel Alliance from destruction and brings hope to the galaxy.

However, Tolkien believed that eucatastrophe could only be brought about through grace, not heroic efforts or human achievements. ***SPOILER ALERT***. A great example is the end of The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King. Burdened by the ring and carrying it from the Shire to Mordor, Frodo has finally succumbed to the ring’s will at the heart of Mt. Doom. Unable to resist, he tries to take the ring for himself. 

Frodo was on the brink of destroying the ring, but its accidental destruction during his fight with Gollum granted an unexpected grace.

Eucatastrophe does not deny the existence of sorrow, wrath, fear, greed, oppression, failure, or death; instead, it offers a glimpse of hope and joy through grace, denying universal final defeat through unexpected means. 

The Incarnation was a momentous event, even though it was prophesied in the Old Testament. It was a sudden and unexpected event that changed the very nature of reality and our understanding of human history. The Incarnation was the first significant change in reality since the world’s creation. It brought together God and creation, marking the beginning of the redemption and reconciliation of the earth to God through Jesus.

While Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings is a fantastic work of fiction, it can sometimes be challenging to relate to the story’s fantastical elements – we’re not wizards, Balrogs, or Hobbits. This is where shows like Ted Lasso come in. Ted Lasso is a show that understands human relationships and how they can bring about unexpected moments of grace, hope, and joy. 

Richmond Till We Die

Let’s address the larger-than-life elephant in the room – yes, I am a huge fan of Ted Lasso. I have rewatched the show countless times and listened to numerous podcasts where people analyze and discuss each episode. I even have Ted Lasso stickers on my belongings and a Coach Beard costume that I will probably wear every Halloween, and I bought Fifa 23 so that I could play as Ted Lasso and the entire AFC Richmond team.

Ted Lasso is a show about an American football coach hired to coach a struggling English soccer team. Despite the cultural differences and initial hatred towards him, Ted Lasso’s kindness, empathy, and belief in others transformed the team, leading to unexpected growth and success. The show is a testament to the power of human connections and the way they can bring about moments of joy and hope in the face of adversity. Moreover, it shows that eucatastrophe is not just limited to the world of fantasy or the Bible but can also be found in our everyday lives through our relationships with others.

During the Advent season, we’ll reflect on the themes of grace, hope, and joy and how they can reveal themselves unexpectedly in our relationships. Perhaps our friend Ted can offer some valuable insights.