Disappointment, Meaning of Life, Setbacks

My Life is a Movie

No Comments 05 November 2007

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Scripture

Job continued speaking:
“I long for the years gone by
when God took care of me,
when he lit up the way before me
and I walked safely through the darkness.
When I was in my prime,
God’s friendship was felt in my home.
The Almighty was still with me,
and my children were around me.Â
Job 29:1-5

Observation
Some people view life like a snapshot and others know that life is really more like a movie.

Snapshot people take the golden moments of their lives, capture the memory an ideal picture, wrap it in a gilded frame and hang it in a place of honor. It may be a memory of when their children were little before the nest emptied. Or there may be memories of life before parents died or a particular home or a wedding day, or frat house or high school days or whatever life season that was filled with warmth, laughter, prosperity and respect. Snapshot people think the old days were the best days. When they look at the current life they lead that exists around the snapshot they feel sad. If only they could somehow enter back into the framed picture and live those days again they would be so happy.

People who see life not as a snapshot but as a movie know that the only permanent thing in life is change. Life is not a frozen photo moment, instead life is living and it is one the move like a movie. People come, people go, money comes, money goes, heath comes, health goes, jobs come, jobs go, honor comes, honor goes. Frame by frame life flows on. No one flickering moment defines a whole life.

Movie people are realistic. When a golden moment comes they know that it cannot be clenched forever. The scene can be enjoyed but the movie moves on. But they also know that because a movie is moving they are never stuck with the disappointing episodes. The reel is moving on. If they will keep munching their popcorn something new is up ahead. The current disappointments will make the future segments that much more interesting and enjoyable.

When we read the book of Job we know how the movie ends, but Job does not. He is in the middle. He wants to push the rewind button and put his life on pause at family moments so he can frame the golden moments. But if he will be patient and let the movie move forward he will discover that the end is better than the beginning. The best is yet to come.

Every movie comes to a resolution of the closing scene when the plot resolves itself. In fact it happens with every well-written book too. Plot has development, climax and resolution. I’ve often pondered as I’ve finished a movie why it is that everything works out in the end. I’ve come to the conclusion that the resolving of every movie and story is one of the hints in life that God does exist. As the Bible says, “He makes all things beautiful in his time.” God is the master story teller. His writing paper is life, his pen are human lives and our footprints leave the ink trails on the paper that record the story. Movies and novels are a human attempt to emulate the story telling of God. But the real story is happening in your life and mine.

Application
If I delete a snapshot view of life and instead accept that life is a movie then I can learn to be patient to hold on to see how things will work out. Too often I camp in old life moments and refuse to keep moving on. I have not yet lived my best day. The best is yet to come. I wonder if Job lived differently after his family picture was restored to him? I hope so and think so. An experience like his would have changed me. Instead of living in the past, I must enjoy the present knowing that God is developing the plot of my life to a surprise ending.

Prayer
Father, there are old days I’d like to live again but I cannot. Help me to enjoy what you have given me today and I look forward to the best that is yet to come. In the end I know I will end up in heaven and all my life is leading there. At home in heaven I will have one thing in common with every person there. For as I tell the story of my life to bystanders on the streets of gold, my story will end with the same line that theirs will, “And then I ended up here.” The best really is yet to come. I give you the freedom to keep the film of my life playing right to the end. I won’t hit pause and live in the past. I’m ready to move on.


I'm Phil McCallum, a husband, father and most of all one of the people Jesus loves. I'm privileged to serve Evergreen Community Church in Bothell, Washington as Senior Pastor where people love enough to believe "it's all about relationships." In 1982 I made a vow to read God's word daily and apply it to life. Each day I write out my reflections. Some days I post those on my blog. It's a little personal but it's my hope it will stir you to go deeper still. Learn how I do my devotions. These are my thoughts and not necessarily those of the ministry I serve. By the way check out the computer study Bible Glo. I highly recommend it.

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