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							Why do people continue to show up at the ballpark on 
							Addison and Clark in Chicago? They don’t show up 
							because the team is a winning ball club, bringing 
							championships and pennants to the grandstands. In 
							fact, any honest Cubs fan will tell you the team 
							hasn’t been good in years and it’ll be years before 
							the hope of capturing the elusive World Series will 
							enter back into our dreams.
 Growing up in Peoria my family often went to Peoria 
							Chiefs baseball games at old Meinen Field. I 
							remember chatting my dad’s ear off asking him about 
							where we were sitting, if I could get autographs 
							from these no-name ball players who one day would be 
							the next Ozzie Smith or Ken Griffey Jr., and what 
							the chances were of me snagging a foul ball. I went 
							with great expectations.
 
 Now that I am much older and more aware of the 
							beauty and the spirituality of the game, I have come 
							to realize not only why so many continue to go watch 
							a bad ball club but also the reason why I go myself:
 
 connection.
 
 We are a part of a world of disconnection. 
							Things were created to be a certain way, and they 
							are not that way, and we feel it in every fiber of 
							our being.
 
 We feel it when our heart sinks at the sight of 
							Styrofoam cups and burger wrappers lining our creek 
							beds rather than flowers bursting with beautiful 
							blooms.
 A disconnection with the environment.
 
 We feel it when we realize what once gave us life 
							--a relationship, our work, and perhaps even our 
							church-- now feels like an obligation, something 
							that exhausts rather than excites and inspires.
 A disconnection with each other.
 
 But it hasn’t always been like this. In the first 
							chapter of Genesis, when God creates the first 
							people, God blesses them. This is significant. The 
							story begins with humans in right relationship—in 
							healthy, life-giving connection—with their maker. 
							All of their relationships flowed from the health of 
							this one central relationship—people and God.
 
 Then, like the 2003 Cubs team, everything goes 
							south. They choose another way. And they become 
							disconnected. They are told there will be 
							conflict between one another; there will be conflict 
							between them and the soil.
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			 We’re 
			severed and cut off, disconnected in a thousand ways, and we 
			know it, feel it, and are aware of it every day. It’s an ache in our 
			bones that won’t go away. And so from an early age we have this 
			awareness of the state of disconnection we were born into, 
			and we have a longing to reconnect.
 I face the traffic of Lake Shore Drive during the dog days of summer 
			to catch a baseball game for that reason. It is why you go to the 
			Met in New York to be with a group of people and listen to an opera 
			that will move you in ways you never have been before. It is why you 
			go on that boat trip or hiking trip with your buddies because what 
			you see and experience reconnects you not only to each other, 
			not only to yourself, but to something greater:
 to the God who dwells within you.
 
 Standing up and stretching while singing “Take Me Out to the 
			Ballgame” connects us to something beyond ourselves. We don’t 
			know all those who have gathered. We come from vastly different 
			backgrounds, we disagree on hundreds of issues, but for an evening, 
			for a fleeting moment, we gather around these ball players and that 
			artwork, this artist and these songs, and we get along –we 
			connect. The experience moves us because it taps into how things 
			were meant to be, and few places exist where we can experience what 
			God intended on such a large scale.
 
 That desire is why people continue to show up, for a hundred years 
			now, to Addison and Clark. It’s why we walk through the doors of any 
			concert, church service, or rally for a just cause. We feel 
			connected to the people we’re having the experience with, and 
			not just connected, but the experience taps into that 
			awareness of something bigger than all of us that we’re brushing up 
			against in the process.
 
 That in itself is reason enough
 
 to
 show
 up.
 [Adam Quine, Pastor of First Presbyterian Church in Lincoln]
 
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