I love
action movies. The cheesy ones, the ridiculous concepts, and the “that could
never happen!” movies are just awesome. But the ones I love the most are the
ones that are made on an epic scale. I loved the Lord of the Rings movies, not
for all of their nerdy goodness, but for the massive scale of the battle
scenes. Everything just seemed larger. That’s what I loved about the movie Troy.
For me, the
film Troy was perfect for a number of
reasons. I’m a big fan of both The Iliad
and The Odyssey. Epic poems are
awesome. I’ve always loved Greek mythology. So when I found out Troy was coming I was super pumped. I
saw it the weekend it debuted and it is a great film. I’ve got to tell you though;
the opening sequence kind of let me down…
Let’s set
the scene here. Barren dessert battlefield. Two armies facing off. The leaders
decide to have their champions fight instead of killing hundreds of men. I’m
thinking, “Finally! Achilles gets to whoop some tail! This is what I’ve been
waiting for!” The scene is drawn out perfectly. Slowly acceleration as Achilles runs, obvious
bad guy, escalating music, huge evil guy vs. small good guy…and then it
happens. Achilles jumps and appears to lightly poke the pad guy with his sword
and he falls down dead. I remember audibly, in the theatre saying, “That’s it!”
I wanted a battle! I wanted shields to crash and blows to be exchanged! The
battle is what makes it good right? The battle is what tells the story. If the
movie had ended right there I might have walked out. Troy stinks if it ends in the first ten minutes! Sometimes the
conflict really makes the story.
Think about
all of your favorite Bible stories. Would you want to read, “Shadrach, Meshach, Abednego, and the Hot
Tub at Nebuchadnezzar’s Palace Because
Everyone Resolved Their Differences?” or “Daniel and the Cuddly Puppies’ Den?” Would kids in Children’s
Church want to sing:
Joshua, didn't fight Jericho, Jericho, Jericho.
Joshua, didn’t fight Jericho,
Jericho, Jericho.
Because they decided to walk around, around, around.
Because they decided to walk around, around, around.
Sometimes the conflict really makes the story and without it
there wouldn’t BE a story.
If you’re in
a conflict right now ask yourself, “What kind of story does God want to tell
through me and this situation?” Don’t get me wrong, I’m not saying that I love
conflict or that you should seek out hard times to give God a chance to prove
himself. He doesn’t need our help to prove his greatness. What I am saying is
that if you’re in the middle of a conflict you can take solace in the fact that
God is the one who’s writing your story. In fact he’s the “author and perfecter”
of our story (Heb. 12:2). Trust him to write a good ending.
Consider it pure joy, my brothers, whenever you face trials of many
kinds, because you know that the testing of your faith develops
perseverance. Perseverance must finish its work so that you may be mature
and complete, not lacking anything.
James 1:2-4
James 1:2-4