Geocaching is a new game of hide and seek that people play with their handheld GPS device. A GPS helps you to tsrack and locate a hidden object, the coordinates of which have been entered into the GPS' navigation system. Caches are usually small containers with trinkets in them, prizes for the seeker/finder. There are hundreds of thousands of geocaches around the world. People are seekers. We like to find things and be found. We like to use our minds, our intuition, and our tools to find our way. Searching is in our DNA.
"For as long as I can remember, I've been searching for something, some reason why we're here. What are we doing here? Who are we? If this is a chance to find out even just a little part of that answer... I don't know, I think it's worth a human life. Don't you?" (From the movie "Contact", with Jodie Foster.) Searching for meaning. Asking why. It's what sets us apart. We have the capacity to ask questions, to search, to discover, to assign meaning to an experience or event or object. We make sense of our world.
In a Google world, where an engine searches millions of pages of digital content to provide the searcher with the best results for their inquiry within seconds, we expect to find answers instantly and easily. Is everything available through Google? Is there nothing hidden that cannot be found with the click of the mouse and the stroke of the keys?
"You have searched me out and known me," sang the biblical Psalmist thousands of years ago. God searches for people, too. God seeks us, even as we seek after the mysteries of life. We seek God to make sense of the things we cannot Google for understanding.
I am reading a book right now called "Enough: Why people starve in an age of plenty." I think that is a question worth asking. Why do people starve in an age of plenty? Why, if there is enough food for everyone on the planet, do 26,500 children die daily from preventable diseases related to hunger? Google that. If you Google the world hunger about 49 million hits emerge. That's about how many Americans suffer from food insecurity, a lack of adequate resources to provide food for their household. I think we could spend our lives searching for a way to end hunger in the world.
Searching for the truth about life, we travel, we read, we explore ideas, we pay attention to events and people. Most people need a Google or a GPS to navigate their way in the world. We need direction, guidance, a map.
I like to think that searching, though often personal, is not best done in private. It is best done in the company of other searchers. Geocaching is a great family activity.
Searching for the truth about the world, ourselves, and God is something we do best in conversation with others. It is better not to search alone. Lonely searching too often becomes wandering, which can prove fruitless, aimless, and direction-less.
The biblical story is about a way. From beginning to end, the biblical story is a journey filled with movement and obstacles and misguidance and redirection.
Jesus says, "I am the way, the truth, and the life." What is the way of Jesus? How does Jesus teach us to seek after God? Where does Jesus go? What tools does he offer for navigation? What are the maps Jesus' uses to direct His people into the life God intends? By carefully reading the bible we can come to see these maps. They do not provide a single-lane highway, easy-to-travel approach. We will need to use our imagination, intuition, and collective resources to find the way. On the way, we might also be found.
The Christian community believes that the way is Jesus. The way to peace. The way to compassion. The way to justice. The way to death. The way to life. Jesus is the way there. Getting on the way with Jesus is what church is about. It is about finding one's way in the world with Jesus as our master. He shows us the way.
Coming up in the next post... Using Jesus' maps: ancient practices that give direction.
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