Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Beauty and Desire


Over the summer I spent six weeks in Heaven. Woops, not Heaven; I mean Slovenia. The country of Slovenia is a delicious little hot pot of castles, European charms, and mountainous, clear-watered, cavernous goodness. It’s so gorgeous it’s stupid.

I remember a conversation I had with a girl at the Philosophy Faculty at the University of Ljubljana about satisfaction. She said that as soon as we get something, we either want something more or we despise what we finally have. Por ejemplo, imagine a piece of chocolate cake (my apologies, fellow chocoholics). Mmmm, chocolate cake. Chocolate cake sounds so utterly satisfying, doesn't it? If I could just have a little bite of moist, melty, chocolate cake then perhaps life would finally feel complete. I probably ruined that word picture by using the word moist but whatever. Chocolate cake. But the thing is, as soon as I get chocolate cake, I either walk away desiring more but denying myself the indulgence or I indulge entirely and walk away uncomfortably full. Has anyone ever actually had a perfectly satisfying quantity of chocolate cake? Because that is a life experience I’ve yet to have.

Maybe I have an unhealthy affection for chocolate cake and maybe that’s a dumb example (or maybe it’s Maybelline), but the point this girl was making was that nothing in life, even down to our simplest desires, is satisfying. “Hope deferred makes the heart sick,” but it seems like hope fulfilled is just as sickening.

I thought a lot about that conversation while I was walking through the Ć kocjan Caves that weekend in Southern Slovenia. The caves were… cavernous. They were absolutely breathtaking—we’d seen beautiful landscapes and cottages buried affectionately in rolling hills of infinite green, but compared to the vast, dark mystery of the caves, those scenes seemed petty. There, in the recesses of the earth, God was just showing off. But the whole time, all I could think about was how I could possibly bottle that beauty up and just wallow in it forever. Cameras couldn’t have captured it. Any description of it sounds limp. But it was like I couldn’t just be satisfied looking at it in that moment. I wanted to bind up the sounds and sights and sensations and package them perfectly away in my memory.

It was there that I realized the connection between beauty and desire. Beauty is a desire because it’s unsatisfying. It leaves us grasping to capture it and dwell in it forever but it’s impossible. Even if we could live surrounded by that kind of beauty for life, we would become conditioned to it and the beauty would lose its beautifulness in the familiarity.

And it’s the same with chocolate cake. It’s the same with people. It’s the same with grace. It’s the same with unfulfilled dreams.

Life is beautiful and so life, my friends, is unsatisfying. It is a constant wanting.

That’s frustrating for me as a believer in the gospel of Jesus because I often feel like the Christian life is supposed to satisfy me. I feel like I’m supposed to sit around without any kind of want or desire for anything. “The LORD is my shepherd, I shall not be in want.” But… I’m not satisfied.

Gasp! Christian girl says what? Forgive my sarcasm, but see, even if I am entirely wrong and Jesus is not God, that wouldn’t change the fact that life isn’t satisfying! It’s too late for me to lie to myself in romantic optimism—the (perhaps bluntly morbid) truth is that life is hard and then we all die. But if Jesus is true, then hope is a real thing. And would give an answer for this feeling of desire I constantly have that I'm not fit for anything here. I've been created for something--Someone--else entirely.

And so, if our experience (yes, even in our relationship with Jesus) in this life were entirely satisfying, leaving us desiring nothing more, then there would be no point in Heaven or in faith.

My point is not at all to diminish the beauty of Jesus, but perhaps expand our imaginations a bit. In Heaven we will experience full satisfaction for the first time. Ever. Can you even imagine that? No one in the history of humanity has ever experienced full satisfaction: a total lack of wanting in any form along with full peace, joy, and purpose—the fact that we even have a word for it kind of amazes me.

This is why I yearn for Heaven. Because until we encounter Jesus as fully, resurrected sinless beings, we will never know hope fulfilled. The hopes we have in this life will always be like Gatsby’s green light flickering from across the lake: dim and disappointing when finally they are realized. They’re like Olympians stepping off the podium and being ruined for having accomplished everything they’d ever strived for. If I had no faith in Heaven or in the existence of God then I’d have to live with the fact that life has never satisfied me and never will and so all is just “meaningless, meaningless…a chasing after the wind.” But because of my hope in Heaven, I can stare fearlessly into the face of life and say, “You don’t make me happy. And I’m okay with that because being with God in eternity will.” That’s why Paul said that “if only for this life we hope in Christ, we are to be pitied above all men.” Sure, you can write me off as being a pessimistic cynic (and sure, maybe there's some truth in that) but if I said anything else, I don't think it would be honest.

Beauty in Heaven will not be a desire. It will simply be beauty and we will be able to enjoy it timelessly to the glory of God. It is the only hope fulfilled that could not possibly disappoint because it will be fulfilled forever. “For in this hope we are saved. But hope that is seen is no hope at all. For who hopes for what he already has? But if we hope for what we do not have, we wait for it patiently.”

I wait for the day when Jesus will redefine Beauty.