Photography
is amazing. I love to sit down with a National
Geographic and admire the powerful images taken by some of the world’s most
skilled photographers in some of the most varied and remote parts of the world.
I enjoy taking pictures too, but I cannot call myself a “photographer” in
comparison to the people who take the shots for N.G. and other beautiful magazines.
I
use a little digital camera and rely on my computer to adjust lighting, color,
and other aspects of a particular photograph. But with a more expensive camera,
the beauty is in the lens. I’ve watched as a knowledgeable photographer has
been shooting pictures and, in seeking a different image, has decided to change
the lens. You get an entirely different picture when you change the lens.
Have
you ever known someone who sees the world “through rose-colored glasses”? My
sister is one of those. Christie sees the world filled with gorgeous light and
she goes around filling the world with that light. It’s not that she doesn’t
know about the dark corners of the world, but she’s chosen her rose-colored
lens to view life and it has made her—and the many people who know her and her
Rose Water Cottage industry—very happy.
By
contrast, do you know people who see the world through a dark, gray lens—or whatever
sort of lens would drain all the color from the world? They see every event as potentially
hazardous and they view the people in their life as troublemakers and burdensome.
They can drain all the energy and happiness out of a room just by walking into
it.
They
need to change their lens.
Life
is hard sometimes. And that “sometimes” can stretch into a very long time. But
we all choose with which lens we will view life. Will we view life through the “My
parents / my siblings / my spouse never loved me” lens and allow that to color
how we view everything else in the world? Will we choose the “I’m not as
good-looking / wealthy / healthy / strong / popular / educated as so-and-so”
lens and use that to excuse our lack of effort in every area? Will we use the “My
heart was broken” lens to keep us from ever trusting to love again?
I
know this may be messing too close to home…stepping on toes here. I know that because
this is something I’ve had to deal with…many things I’ve had to let go of in my
own life. Bitterness I held onto for way too long that began to eat away at the
joy and the grace everywhere else in my life.
So
consider the lens the psalmist was looking for when he wrote this:
My
tears have been my food day and night,
while people say to me all day long,
“Where is your God?”
These things I remember as I pour out my soul:
how I used to go to the house of God
under the protection of the
while people say to me all day long,
“Where is your God?”
These things I remember as I pour out my soul:
how I used to go to the house of God
under the protection of the
Why,
my soul, are you downcast?
Why so disturbed within me?
Put your hope in God,
for I will yet praise him,
my Savior and my God.
Why so disturbed within me?
Put your hope in God,
for I will yet praise him,
my Savior and my God.
(Ps. 42:3-5)
This is the
sound of a lens being changed. This is the “hope” lens being put into place.
And when we look through the lens of hope,
everything looks better.
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