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God And Beauty
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Mar 12, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: May the prayer of each of our lives be, "Let the beauty of Jesus be seen in me." May our lives be filled with the flower power of the Lily of the Valley.
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When my daughter was little I use to take her for a ride on a mini bike
through the fields. There were a number of wild flowers, and just on impulse
I said to Cindy, "Let's see how many flowers we can find out here." Every
time we saw a different kind of flower she would pick it, and we would go on
with the search. In a matter of minutes we were amazed at the variety, and
within half an hour we had the most beautiful bouquet of 23 different kinds of
wild flowers. Such an experience made a deep impact on both of us. We were
impressed with the fact that God is a lover of beauty, and that there is more
beauty in God's creation than most of us ever see. If you keep your eyes open,
you never know when or where you will experience new beauties. Douglas
Malloch put it in poetry-
Along the journey here and there
You often find a flower,
Just anytime or anywhere,
No special place or hour.
They are not planted in a row;
You never guess, you never know;
Around a bend a fellow goes,
And right ahead he sees a rose.
If a Christian is not feeding his soul on the beauties of life, he will not be
growing in beauty himself, and will be failing to fulfill the purpose of God in
his life. Rousseau said, "Take from our hearts the love of the beautiful and
you take away the charm of life." Beauty plays an important role in the life
of a believer, but it is seldom given serious consideration. Dr. Harry Fosdick
once said, "Nothing in human life, least of all in religion, is ever right until it
is beautiful." Nothing that is truly Christlike is ever ugly. All of the fruits of
the spirit are beautiful.
William Blake went so far as to say, "A Poet, a Painter, a Musician, an
Architect, the man or woman who is not one of these is not a Christian." He
is saying that every true Christian will add some beauty to life, or he is not
being Christian. Marion L. Bliss in her book The Way Of Wonder explains
why this is so. "Because to be a Christian is to be a follower of perfection,
and a man who seeks perfection soon becomes an artist. The true philosopher
is a follower of truth; the true musician is a follower of harmony and law; the
true architect is a follower of order and design and symmetry; the true
painter is a follower of light and beauty; the true poet is a follower of love.
These paths are the paths of perfection, truth, harmony, law, order, design,
light, beauty and love, and all lead to one goal-God."
The Gospel and beauty have always gone hand in hand in their
transforming march across the world scared by sin. Whenever men turn to
Christ their lives and their environment become more beautiful. When John
Wesley rode up and down through the English countryside during the last
half of the 18th century, his soul was touched by the poverty, and ugliness of
the village life. He decided to start a contest. He distributed flower seeds to
all of the housewives, and he offered prizes to those who could raise the most
beautiful gardens. The result is that the English countryside has the
reputation of being the most colorful in the world. Wesley not only changed
the history of Christianity in the English world, but his love of beauty
changed even the physical environment. He would have said amen to the poet
who wrote,
If of thy mortal goods thou are bereft,
And from thy slender store to loaves alone to thee are left,
Sell one, and with the dole
Buy hyacinths to feed thy soul.
Our purpose in this message is to show that the Bible supports this
emphasis on the importance of beauty. It is not a luxury, but a necessity for
the good and godly life. Philosophers have always included beauty among the
highest values of life. Their trinity of values have always been the good, the
true, and the beautiful. We want to consider this subject under three
headings: The fact of beauty; the form of beauty, and the force of beauty.
Let's look first at-
I. THE FACT OF BEAUTY.
Our text tells that God has made everything beautiful in its time. If there
is any man who cannot see that God loves beauty, he is blind indeed. You just
as well try and teach a stone to appreciate Bach as to try and teach such a
person to appreciate the Master Artist of all beauty. Such persons are rare,
however, and Clarence E. Macartney, the great preacher, was convinced that