My wife and I are staying in the Salt Lake City area this
winter. We normally go someplace a bit warmer, but there are two things in
particular that are making the cold bearable: we get to spend lots of time with
our new granddaughter, and we can attend Capital Church every Sunday. This is
one of those churches that makes you excited to get up on Sunday morning. You
never know what you’re going to hear, but it is always timely and drawn
directly from the Word of God.
The sermon series we’re hearing now is called “Christmas at
the Movies.” My first reaction when Pastor Troy Champs announced the series was
doubtful. I wondered if we were going to move away from Bible preaching and get
into some warm, fuzzy Christmas culture stuff. I needn’t have worried, although
I was really curious when I saw that the first movie we would look at was Elf.
If you haven’t seen Elf, I’ll just say it always struck me as a cross between really sappy and really dopey. In spite of that, the speaker not only drew a solid biblical message from it, but it made me think deeply about what it means to come to Jesus “as a little child.” First let me distinguish between childish and childlike. If the adjective childish is applied to an adult, it is most often derogatory, and this is how I originally saw the message of Elf; it is silly. Most of the humor in the movie is drawn from the main character, Buddy’s, childish behavior. It is funny to see an adult doing ridiculous, childish things, but there is not much material for a biblical application.
However, Buddy was also unswervingly trusting and totally uninhibited
like a child. There is the biblical message. Our speaker Sunday pointed out
just how relevant this is to Jesus’ words in Matthew 18. In 1st century
Jewish culture, children were considered of no value until they could
contribute to the family’s support. They were on the lowest step of the
socio-economic ladder. In this context Jesus said, “Unless you turn and become
like children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven.” (Matthew 18:3) Kingdom
entrance requires complete trust, total absence of an agenda, and an admission
of our complete worthlessness outside of God’s grace, in other words, a
childlike attitude.
It struck me as I was reading about the visions of God in
the first few chapters of Ezekiel this morning that a childlike view of the
indescribable things the prophet saw is necessary. An adult artist’s concept of
perspective and spatial relationships makes drawing what Ezekiel saw virtually
impossible. Many have tried. Just Google “Ezekiel’s vision image” and see them,
all 405,000 of them. Yet I suspect a child would have no trouble putting crayon
to paper and representing the vision. Cast aside all the grownup ideas of what
can and cannot be “real,” and the Bible becomes more “real” than ever. I’m
thinking of things like The Garden of Eden, Jacob’s ladder, crossing the Red
Sea, David and Goliath, the visions of the prophets and so on endlessly.
The other thing that really struck me after thinking about a
childlike attitude is all the places where Scripture refers to believers as
children of God. The Israelites were repeatedly called the Children of God.
According to New Testament teaching, believers today are children of our
Heavenly Abba, adopted into His family through the work of Christ on the cross.
Even secular writers sometimes say we are all children of God, which is true,
but only a select few enjoy the benefits of inheritance. Disobedient children
will not fare so well in the next life.
I still think Elf is pretty dopey, but I also think that my
attitude toward God and His Word might look “dopey” to the unbelieving world. I
have often heard the intellectual elite of the world talk about how ridiculous
it is for thinking adults to buy into all the myths or fairy tales of the
Bible. If we were believing in Zeus or the evil stepmother, that would be
childish. However, I believe Ezekiel saw a wheel-in-a-wheel, even though I will
never be able to draw it. I also believe the Messiah rose from the dead and
reigns over all the earth today. That is childlike faith, and it is far from
childish.
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