The struggling Christian bows her head at Starbucks, tears in the eyes and despair in the heart because — despite her best intentions — she has hurt someone again. In a world where she has felt so much pain, and been mistreated so many times, she couldn’t stop it. When treated wrong, she lashed out again — in furious anger, biting words, searing jabs. Her ugliness was thrown in their faces, and they were hurt. And the soul that was just trying to patch itself up from so much pain has now made someone else feel just as shredded as she. She didn’t want to hurt them; she just wanted the pain to go away.
But corrupted life is better than no life at all.
The disgraced father bows his head and tightens his hands, the pit in his stomach and hole in his heart growing faster than the fruit of his efforts. A sin done years ago is back, taunting him. It has found his children, screaming at them with the shock of his past. He has become a lesser man, a shell of a soul, a carrier of wretchedness. And now, in the season when the scab was supposed to be fading to a scar — forgiven so many times now — it is being ripped off and picked at. Insufficient as a man, failing as a father, fallen as a soul, he just wants to escape the pain.
But corrupted life is better than no life at all.
He is by the ocean, surfboard stashed by his sandals, with the salt wind blowing through his perfect hair, over his perfect face, down his perfect body. But in the lap of wealth and talent, the emptiness grows – the gap that is never edged by enough beautiful moments, not hidden by the comfort of many who love him, not filled by the answers and truths he’s been told are it. To keep living means to keep finding those bits of happiness, only to have them crushed by the overwhelming feeling that it is not enough. The soul still aches, the brain still wonders, the heart still hurts. He just wants the turmoil to stop.
But corrupted life is better than no life at all.
She is successful, at the top of it all, a mastermind at both her craft and among the people she knows. A job never comes that she can’t do, a contest she can’t win, an idea she can’t best. Advancement has never come up short; the answers are always there. Yet, for all the achievement, a pause. More answers only lead to more questions, deeper questions, worse questions — questions of never really feeling love, of being so close yet not really being able to grasp life, of the heart falling limp while the brain is twirling. She just wants a friend, a real hope, an idea that maybe this doesn’t have to be it. She wants to switch the twirling off.
But corrupted life is better than no life at all.
She didn’t mean to walk to the beat of her own drum; she didn’t ever really know she was that different. She was happy, alone, running in her imagination and doing what she knew best. Do this and it will be better, they said, so she did. Help here and you will be great, they said, so she did. She saw pictures and ideas and words that made her heart skip, her brain explode, her feet float. She ran after them, moving them here and adding them there, making beautiful little worlds. But when she came outside again, the faces were different. She was still doing this and being better, helping here and being great, but for some reason it wasn’t enough. For some reason there was disapproval now, a looking down on her little works of art. The beat of her own drum was frowned at, as if it was some horror she had made to subvert the world. She tried to help and only made disasters. She spoke the only things she knew and was chided for being so wrong. She was good enough not to get help, not to get extra love, but not good enough to win praise. She was one vote away from victory, one letter from being accepted. She was unwanted, incomplete, and she didn’t know why. And she just wanted the unapproving looks to go away.
But corrupted life is better than no life at all.
He usually doesn’t know what to say, but he tries. He tries to be friendly, tries to help, tries to listen. Usually it just makes it worse. Every attempt at better just makes it worse.
They put up buildings with good intentions, programs with high hopes, but now those visions have been taken and polluted. They’ve been spoiled, used for evil causes. They’ve been adulterated into schemes that look the same but have no good within. They’ve been misunderstood.
They’ve killed, maimed, and murdered. An entire nation eliminated. Children’s hands cut off. Dictators withhold food. Politicians take away basic decency. The mentally ill fall into the streets; the handicapped cower to the back of the room. The dumb are scorned, the weak are ridiculed, the wanting are left behind.
They build entire societies on hurt and waste and oppression. Generations go by without hope. Children become adults to feel pain and die. Good men suffer for fools. Strong men see life wither to feed the lazy.
But in the darkness, a soul stands up.
After years of hurting others, the girl realizes that hurt can stop. Crying in the coffee shop from the residue of her anger, she looks around her and decides it will stop. She will fail so many more times, but today she will succeed at least once. She will choose to help, not hurt. And somewhere, somehow, life will be affirmed and grow. There will be green.
The father gets out of the truck and takes a deep breath of fresh air. He shakes his head clear of his mistakes and determines that, despite all of the pain he’s given his wife and sons, he still has something to give them tomorrow. There will be love; there will be red.
The young man digs his toes into the sand and clenches his fists, chasing away his doubts. If he has mastered the sea, he can master his mind. For all the darkness in his heart, there is a wide open sea, waiting to be explored, asking to be enjoyed. There will be blue.
In her office, the successful woman closes the book. She puts away the notes. She stops looking for answers. And in the quiet, staring out her window at the beautiful lights of the shrouded city scape, she lets herself smile. There will be orange.
The little girl runs from the crowded building and staring faces, runs fast, into the wide open field. She builds castles and dreams up stories. She throws flowers to the wind. She calls her mood joy. There will be yellow.
The boy tries to be friendly one more time. The organizers put together one more program. The missionaries build another church. A martyr stands up in the street. A revolution fills the square. A resistance hides the oppressed. A remnant fosters life. A hopeful youth calls for change, that this world could be different, this generation saved.
Because corrupted life is better than no life at all.
Together they work, often alone, often wondering, often unsure. They make green and red and blue and orange and yellow. A rainbow forms.
And God says, this is my promise; this is my sign. I will never remove life from this earth completely. This world will not be destroyed. When you see clouds, you will also see my rainbow. It will remind you of this promise — that no matter how much hurt there is, how much decay, how much hopeless and destruction — life will never disappear. Some kind of life is always worth it. You may doubt, but trust me. And when you wonder, when the rain comes and clouds gather, just look at the sky.
Because corrupted life is better than no life at all, and life is the most beautiful thing.
first written 11.12.MMX
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