It is just so easy to not acknowledge Christ in our daily
routine.
The other night, as Hannah and I were exploring the road to
our new home in Cebu, we suddenly looked up to the sky as we had always done
back home in Iligan. The moon was just right above us, hanging in a horizontal
crescent, competing with the other lights in the city. Hannah said it was
rather beautiful, but I frowned a little.
Photo taken from here. Too bad I think I might have deleted the photo I originally took. :(
|
“It looks…old,” I told her, eyes not leaving the moon. When
she was about to ask what I meant, I said, “It looks rather old and sad. Like, for
centuries, it had been looking down on Cebu and watched it grow; Cebu changed,
but it didn’t. It was always there.”
We walked a few more hundred yards but we were still talking
about the moon.
“It’s so easy to not notice the moon in a big city like
Cebu,” I continued. “You see, its glow would always compete with the artificial
lights, that you could even say…people no longer need the moon here.”
I stopped and thought about what I had just said. “Right,” I
mumbled, agreeing to myself. “But if you take everything and live in the rural
places for example, the moon IS the moon. You need it there; In simplicity and
contentment that’s where it shines the brightest. Just…just like the Lord!”
How could a big and
busy city find Christ in their lives when too much of its time is spent in its necessary
routines? Like the moon against the bright city, the glory of the Lord seems to
fade into an old and sad glow. And only a few would stop and see it, too.
These days I have been having terrible experiences in Cebu
streets, having been almost run over several times. Even traffic signs for
pedestrians only turn green for 3 seconds. How could anybody cross a wide road
in 3 seconds? Even if we run, we could never reach the other side of the road
on time. The people behind wheels seem to not see you. If you try to cross a
road, they would never slow down. Really. Never. This is how busy people are
here; they run after time, and never mind the people around them. I could not
even count the number of times passengers try to get on the jeepney and the
jeepney driver starts running the vehicle at full speed even though people are
still crouching at the jeepney’s door, trying to look for a space to sit on. I
could only click my tongue and shake my head. In a city too busy, fast, and
loud, would the Lord’s Voice still be heard? I try to think about how the Lord (for
Cebu, and the most of the nation) was so much like the moon that night.
The city (and the nation) better not be waiting for judgment
and stripping off of everything before the Lord’s glory could shine brighter
here. Earthly treasures try to compete with God, but they would eventually lead
us to destruction anyway. Just when will we able to realize and acknowledge
this?
Earlier this evening, as I was going home alone, I looked up
at the sky again and found the moon glowing a little brighter than last night.
In my head I was wondering if there was somebody else in the big city
acknowledging the moon’s presence amidst the light pollution as I was. I
wonder. I wonder.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Comment and contribute to world peace! :)