It just doesn't always work out well. You take one
thing you like and add it to another thing you like; the results can be a whole
lot less than satisfying.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mistel
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0697682/
For example; I really like fried onions on hamburgers,
cheese steaks or with a nice piece of meat. I like my onions sauteed in
butter till just golden brown. They add flavor and make the whole experience
seem upscale as opposed to just plain, every day and garden variety. I also
like cooked peaches. They are great in hot peach pie or cobbler. Cooked in
butter, they are so tender and sweet, melting in your mouth with just a hint of
sugar and cinnamon added to spice things up. Here 1 + 1 = 2.
Well by now you’re guessing that I did the unimaginable. Yes
it’s true; I did make a dish combining both onions and peaches, cooking them
together in a frying pan with butter. To say that the culinary results were
less than satisfying would be an understatement of epic proportions. To say
that it made me gag is historically accurate as I quickly took the limp mass of
onions and peaches to the trash. There was no standing on ceremony or playing
of “Taps” as they slid out of the pan and into the bottom of the plastic trash
bag. There was momentary panic as I realized that the still hot peaches and
onions might melt the plastic bag thereby enshrining the epicurean glob on the
trash can itself. Thankfully, the NASA designed plastic trash bag maintained it
structural integrity as it only melted a bit. In this case, 1 + 1 = -1.
This idea of adding two good things together with less than
spectacular results is true in more than just cooking. Take war for example, it
just doesn’t always work when you take one thing and add something else to it;
the results can be dumb beyond belief. During World War II, the Nazi’s found
this out when they created the Mistel, also known as Vati und Sohn (Daddy and
Son) by stacking two planes together to create a single “super bomb.” They took
a fighter and mounted it on top of a bomber loaded with explosives. Linking the
two planes and their controls together, they created a single composite
aircraft that was piloted from the fighter. Taking off as a single linked
aircraft, the pilot guided the craft towards it target, releasing the bomber to
self-detonate on impact. This little known technology was employed in the
defense of Normandy on D-Day and some other operations in the European theater.
The idea sounded reasonably good, and there were early
indications that this would work. However, there was one
huge problem that no one foresaw. The combined aircraft was incredibly slow and
awkward, making it an easy target for Allied fighters to hunt down and shoot
out of the sky. After very limited use towards the end of the war, they were
abandoned as a weapon. None of the combined aircraft survived the war; one
fighter with its explosive bolts still intact is on display at the Imperial War
Museum in London. Here 1 + 1 ≠ 2.
While cooking and war planes give us bad examples of trying
to mix things together, so do our lives. We try to continually mix things
together that will only wind up causing grief, pain and trouble. It’s like “The
Deal” episode from Seinfeld;
Jerry: Because this... [friendship gesturing between them] is very good.
Elaine: [gesturing to the bedroom] And that would be good.
Jerry: That [repeating bedroom gesture] would be good too.
Jerry: See the idea's to combine this [friendship gesturing] and that [gesturing to the bedroom]. But this [friendship gesturing] cannot be disturbed.
Elaine: Yeah, we just want to take this [friendship gesturing] and... add that [gesturing to the bedroom].
Jerry: There you go.
Not only do we muddy the waters of life by mixing things
together, we infect our relationship with God in the same way. We take a little
bit of this, a little bit of that and mix it with a smidgen of
something else only to create a Faith Frankenstein of who God is. We
manufacture God with our personal likes, desires and imagination, winding up
with a god idol of our own making. We choose who God is, who we are and how to
reconnect with him. I have a friend in the Midwest that was raised in a
Christian church setting who is mixing all sorts of ideas from around the
religious universe. His picture of God is now an old man, benign, powerless,
and not at all interested in our lives. Being left to fend spiritually for
himself, he seeks out control and knowledge through crystals and personal
empowerment through an impersonal power. My friend’s journey and conclusions
are not at all unusual. I hear the same voyage of spiritual loneliness,
emptiness and abandonment in many.
The really good news is that the complete opposite is true;
God wants a deep, face-to-face, transparent personal relationship with us. He
is not a far away, unknowable, impersonal power. We see his clear desire and
message about this when the Bible describes Jesus as God who personally came
here for us [1]. God is not trying to hide out; he’s reaching out to and for
us. He’s so desires this kind of relationship that Jesus did whatever was necessary
to reunite us, suffering and dying to restore us to God, our meaning and
purpose in life and for all eternity
God offers us himself, and that’s where 1 + 1 really does
equal 1.
Blessings - Chet
Chet Gladkowski speaks and writes on topics that touch on culture, life and faith through GLAD Associates. This article is taken from a chapter in his upcoming book.
Chet Gladkowski speaks and writes on topics that touch on culture, life and faith through GLAD Associates. This article is taken from a chapter in his upcoming book.
Sources:
http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/Mistelhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mistel
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0697682/
[1] John
1:1-4 We are writing to you about something which has always existed yet
which we ourselves actually saw and heard: something which we had an
opportunity to observe closely and even to hold in our hands, and yet, as we
know now, was something of the very Word of life himself! For it was life which
appeared before us: we saw it, we are eye-witnesses of it, and are now writing
to you about it. It was the very life of all ages, the life that has always
existed with the Father, which actually became visible in person to us mortal
men. We repeat, we really saw and heard what we are now writing to you about.
We want you to be with us in this—in this fellowship with the Father, and Jesus
Christ his Son. We must write and tell you about it, because the more that
fellowship extends the greater the joy it brings to us who are already in it.
(JBP)
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