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Have you heard about the September 2004 art exhibit in the Old Town
House Museum in South Africa? The 17th century Dutch Masters paintings
were hung facing the wall. Curator Andrew Lamprecht said it was a
“conceptual art intervention,” and was “new and unexpected.”
I expect that most of those who came through the museum and saw only the
backs of the paintings had other words to describe their experience
besides just “new and unexpected.”
We live in a day and age when people, it seems, will do anything to find
something “new and unexpected.” Many do not seem to know that the old
and familiar may really be better, because it has stood the test of
time.
The
prophet Jeremiah knew this. He told his people, “Thus saith the LORD,
Stand ye in the ways, and see, and ask for the old paths, where is the
good way, and walk therein, and ye shall find rest for your souls. But
they said, We will not walk therein” (Jeremiah 6:16). Part of maturity
is to learn that new and improved is not always new or improved. Let us
devote ourselves to seeking out the old paths, and walking in them. In
our confused religious world, we may even find our task to be “new and
unexpected.”
New
and Unexpected
by Bob Prichard
www.oxfordchurchofchrist.com |