Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Creative Limitation

• Robert Frost: writing free verse is like playing tennis with the net down.
• Principles of Creative Limitation in STORY. By defining your genre, you can reach a higher intensity with LIMITS than complete freedom. "Genre conventions are the rhyme scheme of a storyteller's 'poem'" (91).

I know this principle of creative limitation isn't restricted to the art of storytelling, but bleeds into all realms of art, business, morality, and life.

Even in Middelmann's class, it's so interesting that all the modern philosophers were searching for freedom by creating an organized perception of reality. In the search for truth, the goal is freedom. It's just that complete liberation doesn't give people what they're searching for. I'm reminded of why my heart belongs to God. Besides being truthful, Christianity practically brings the freedom it ensures. It doesn't make lofty promises, but gives you an accurate perception of reality that allows you to live in the tension of brokenness and the inherent hope for Utopia.

Thank you God for limits. Help me know them well so I can live creatively, and wisely :)

Monday, March 29, 2010

Be.

Let the small-minded write,
Let the wise love,
The simple read,
And the captured hearts be.

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Monday, March 8, 2010

Light.

It's like all my thought became bent on encountering it. To embark on this strange, awful journey. I didn't know what light would look like without my shadows. For years I wondered whether it was cool, gentle blue, or searing-red fire. No one could tell me, no matter who I asked or where I looked.

But the more I dreamed the less it mattered. I was made weary by activity, driven to solitude--where it fell upon me. I heard it again. Felt it. Believed it. Wanted it. Missed it. Knew I needed it.

Monday, March 1, 2010

Zoe Life: It is God Who is Working in You

C.S. Lewis says the height of what we know here is biological life: the ability to feel emotion, think, reason, and imagine all included. But what we are incapable of enacting on our own is a different sort of life-the life that is found in God-which he gives the name zoe. When Jesus bridges that gap separating us from the source of all goodness and life, God calls us his children, and invites us to participate in this new kind of spiritual life.

The Bible really seems to clinch the matter when it puts the two things together into one amazing sentance. The first half is, 'Work out your own salvation with fear and trembling'--which looks as if everything depended on us and our good actions: but the second half goes on, 'For it is God who worketh in you' (122 Mere Christianity).

"I think all Christians would agree with me if I said that though Christianity seems at the first to be all about morality, all about duties and rules and guilt and virtue, yet it leads you on, out of all that, into something beyond. One has a glimpse of a country where they do not talk of those things, except perhaps as a joke. Every one there is filled full with what we should call goodness as a mirror is filled with light. But they do not call it goodness. They do not call it anything. They are not thinking of it. They are too busy looking at the source from which it comes" (123 Mere Christianity).

"Handing everything over to Christ does not, of course, mean that you stop trying. To trust Him means, of course, trying to do all that He says. There would be no sense in saying you trusted a person if you would not take his advice. Thus if you have really handed yourself over to Him, it must follow that you are trying to obey Him. But trying in a new way, a less worried way. Not doing these things in order to be saved, but because he has begun to save you already. Not hoping to get to Heaven as a reward for your actions, but inevitably wanting to act in a certain way because a first faint gleam of heaven is already inside you" (121).



Jesus Christ, have mercy on me, a sinner.