Monday, March 23, 2020

Mind the Gap, and Fear Not

from Amazon.com

Is this the Zombie Apocalypse? I think not.

Is it the End of Days?

Sylvia Browne, who died in 2013 (I wonder if she foresaw her own death?) wrote this book in 2008, predicting (as I read yesterday on CNN (see link below) that  around 2020, a pneumonia-like virus that would sweep the world, disappear as quickly as it appeared, reappear 10 years later, and then… something. I read about what she said but lost interest. No, I don’t think it is the end of days. Who needs her when we have Nostradamus? That said, this thing is “flying off the shelves,” as it were, in audio form. The actual book is almost as rare as Pappy, and going for hundreds of dollars. If I am spending that kind of money on something to make me crazy, I am going for the Pappy. https://www.cnn.com/2020/03/22/world/doomsday-prophets-coronavirus-blake/index.html)

from Amazon.com
Now, if you are interested in an interesting book, and like Steven King (who is an agnostic Methodist, as I understand it. Like many others, it would seem)—I recommend The Stand. It is a 1978 book about a pandemic caused by a weaponized virus that very nearly wipes out the world—but only to the stage for the Final battle between good and evil (Browne meets Nostradamus). A little old woman, African-American, sitting in a rocking chair on the porch of her cabin in a Nebraska cornfield, I believe it was (I haven’t read it since seminary), represents God against the Devil’s urban, sophisticated Las Vegas guy. Now that was pretty interesting, but I don’t consider it prophecy. Nor was the mini-series that got made of it (in 1994) very enjoyable.

I have been reading that a lot of people have been watching Contagion, a 2011 movie starring the Goop lady herself, the internet influencer and weird-wannabe of rich mothers everywhere, Gwyneth Paltrow. For that reason alone I have no interest (though I do like her Pepper Potts to Robert Downey’s Iron Man, but that has far more to do with Marvel than Goop. Maybe I will get around to it, after I catch-up on Westworld, The Marvelous Ms. Maisle, Picard, and finally, finally, watch The Mandalorian. I subscribed to Disney Plus six weeks ago for that reason, and I have not watched a thing.
from Amazon.com


For my part, last night, I watched Daniel Craig’s James Bond in both Casino Royale (2006) and Spectre. The first is a great movie, the second…not quite so great. BUT, when Madeleine Swan asks him in the dining car, “Why, with every other option, would anyone choose ‘paid assassin’?” Bond: “Well, it was either that or the priesthood.” Yeah, that is the way I saw it too… but I chose the priesthood, as it were, and not only because I am deaf, have bad joints, terrible reflexes, hate violence [except in Bond movies], look terrible in a bathing but because I have somewhat of a moral center based around “love your enemies.” That said, I really do like James Bond. Eager to see No Time to Die, especially as it is Craig’s last turn at it.

From JamesBondLifestyle.com
I guess what interests me most is the fascination some seem to have with The End. Some pastors—to my mind unscrupulous and irresponsible ones (as irresponsible as the scams promising you a corona-resistant face mask)—are using the sickness and suffering now gripping the planet to stoke fear of God’s judgment and wrath. Mix three measures of self-righteousness with one of anger, a half-understanding of Bible, shake it together till it’s ice cold and add a thin peel of fruitiness… Oh, wait. That sounds a little like Bond’s Vesper (which you can’t make anymore)…  If this is the signal for Jesus' return, "Lord, haste the day." But our thinking about the Day is a matter of hope, not anger; results in joy, not fear.   

All of us are trying to “mind the gap,” as it, were.
from outsideinvestments.com
Whether the gap is in our schedule or between our ears, among separated families or in our hearts, all of us are working to fill the emptiness with something. Some will fill it with fear, with conspiracy theories and outlandish predictions. As to Ms. Browne’s “prophecies,” well, I am reminded of the Ancient Alien theorists who lead with, “Could it be…?” Well, yes, I guess it could be almost anything. Could. Be. Whatever. OH, NO!!

Better, I think, to fill the gap with prayer and faith, with Bible and trust, with entertainment that you know is in fact entertainment and inspiration or strategy. Or fortune-telling.

What was it the comedian said? “I will take the Psychic Friends seriously when they call me.” Nor does God have to eliminate the population for a showdown between Good and Evil. Heck, that happens in every heart, every day—though a season of fear amplifies the battle. Maybe COVID-19 will just disappear (I have heard that from other loons beside Ms. Browne). Maybe it is here to stay or will reappear. Who knows but God.

All I will say is that Jesus, while reminding his disciples that they lived in dangerous times, said, “Fear not.” Over and over again, “Fear not.” Which is why the old hymn, so comforting, takes on a far more credible “prophetic” meaning than any of the doomsday predictions:

          This is my Father’s world. Oh, let me ne’er forget, 
          that though the wrong seems oft so strong God is the ruler yet. 
          This is my Father’s world. Why should my heart be sad? 
          The Lord is king, let the nations sings. God reigns, let the earth be glad.

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