The snow falls quietly outside. It blows and swirls, 
							making the line in that song relevant just 3 days 
							from March. You know the one, “Oh the weather 
							outside is frightful…”  
							 
							We’re under a winter advisory for another 30 
							minutes. 
							 
							The good news, we are within 30 days until the first 
							day of spring.  
							 
							There are probably many of us who are tired of the 
							snow. In comparison to our friends out East, we have 
							had a pretty mild winter. A total of 12 inches or so 
							over a season is a little easier to deal with than 
							12 inches or so every week for the last month.  
							 
							That is a little dramatic, but you get the point.
							 
							 
							Before you know it the sun will be shining across my 
							old Illinois home, buds will be budding on the 
							trees, and kids will be kidding around outside in 
							short sleeves and shorts. Soon, the world will be 
							green again and it’ll look like paradise. 
							 
							However, I was told paradise is a word we must be 
							careful using. (use carefully?) This piece of advice 
							came again via a Christian tract. This time the card 
							consisted of two lawn chairs sitting next to a palm 
							tree, on a sandy beach, looking out over the ocean, 
							a perfect juxtaposition to the weather we are 
							currently experiencing here in Illinois. 
							 
							On the backside of a card is the explanation of why 
							this world is not paradise. That if you believe a 
							peaceful existence is possible then you have 
							believed the lies this world has to offer. 
							Furthermore, paradise is where God dwells. And that 
							dwelling place, is not here. Rather, it is up there, 
							somewhere. And the only way to get there is if you 
							ask Jesus into your heart and repent. If not, don’t 
							expect sunny skies where you’ll go. You’ll be 
							enduring an eternity of living in Death Valley… 
							 
							Before sounding too pejorative, or judgmental, there 
							is a need to repent, to believe in the good news 
							that God loves us, and to further the incarnation 
							with our lives. I’m not denying this. However, to 
							declare this world is not a place of paradise is 
							ludicrous. 
							 
							Anyone who has ever resisted or mourned the 
							destruction of the earth or the demise of one of its 
							living species 
							 
							or has wondered at the beauty of a sunrise, 
							 
							or the awesome power of a storm,  
							 
							or the vastness of prairie or mountain or ocean,  
							 
							or the greening of the earth after periods of 
							dryness or cold,  
							 
							or the fruitfulness of a harvest,  
							 
							or the unique ways of wild or domesticated animals,
							 
							 
  
					 
				 
			 
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			or any of the other myriad phenomena of this planet and its skies 
			has potentially brushed up against an experience of the creative 
			power of the mystery of God, Creator Spirit. As the Bible’s love 
			songs show, the love of God for the world is revealed through the 
			depths of love human beings can feel for one another.  
			What does this have to do with paradise? It speaks 
			to God’s continued creation in our lives. To believe paradise is 
			some far off place is to deny the very real presence of God here and 
			now. God is not a god who set into motion the world, destined it for 
			corruption, and then leaves, only to return just in time for some 
			people and not others. Creation is not a one-time event. Rather, 
			God’s creative activity involves a continuous energizing, an ongoing 
			sustaining of the world throughout the broad sweep of history.  
			 
			God is the giver of life and the lover of life, pervading the cosmos 
			and all of its interrelated creatures with life. If God were to 
			withdraw God’s divine presence everything would go back to nothing. 
			 
			And that nothing is a far cry from 
			 
			paradise. 
			 
			The last sentence of the card encourages its readers not to “live in 
			a fool’s paradise thinking this life is all there is. God is 
			inviting you to the ‘real’ paradise through faith in Jesus Christ.” 
			 
			Honestly, while we have hope in the resurrection, what we have is 
			now and this now is a gift. What is so compelling about God’s love 
			and God’s goodness is that God has promised to remain with us as we 
			return to God’s original vision of earth—paradise. Perhaps we would 
			actually come to know what paradise has to offer if we believed in 
			the goodness of all people, committed to the uplifting of one 
			another, and made sure care was taken of all.  
			 
			If God can make dry bones walk, why can’t God use us to usher in 
			paradise?  
			 
			God loves us and this love God has for us creates goodness, making 
			the entire world and us lovable.  
			 
			 
			That sounds like a place I could call paradise…even when it does 
			snow. 
			[Adam Quine, Pastor of First Presbyterian Church in Lincoln]  |