Well, for those of you who watched the show, and watched the series finale, what did you think? I consider myself a pretty true Lost fan. I didn't love season 3, but then who did until they pulled that flash-forward? Regardless, the end finally came, the show really is over, and it provided a number of answers, some heart-felt reunions, and left a lot of questions still hanging.
Personally, I kind of loved the first 90 minutes of the finale, and then started to like the last hour less and less as it went along. As a Christian I had to chuckle at the "One Mountain many paths" silliness at the "church" at the end. And the Titanic ending was kind of a cop-out for me. But, with the expectations laid on this show, I think they did alright simply by not setting off riots from fans all over the world, so there you go.
One thing I had been thinking about that I wanted to pass on. It's been funny to hear people react to the Jacob vs. Man in Black dynamic the past several weeks. As it became clear Jacob was, at some level, a god of the Island, the arbitrariness of his actions really bothered people. They wanted rules that "god" had to follow. They wanted fairness. And yet, Jacob seemed to make his own rules, and do what was right in his eyes, his eyes having a much bigger scope and picture than anyone else.
It made me think that, on that issue, the writers were doing a better of painting some Christian themes than they might have even realized. How many people do you know that are frustrated and angry with God? They're mad at His seemingly arbitrary nature, how He doesn't always play by the rules. Good things happen to bad people. Bad things happen to good ones. Life isn't fair, and the real God should always be fair (at least, what we think fair should be.) I thought it was funny. Many of the complaints thrown around about Jacob in the show, could be made about the one true God in heaven. And, they might have the same sting, if not for one thing: Jesus.
The thing about Jesus is that He's not arbitrary, He is infinitely fair. Jesus came and died for everybody. His forgiveness is available to all who ask. He loves everyone. Jesus changes everything. God doesn't have to explain Himself to us, His view of our lives is greater than our own. The inconsistencies and unfairness that surrounds us don't need to be explained away by Him. Because He asks us to focus on something greater. He asks us to believe that the frustrations of this world are temporary. That this world is not our home. And instead of wasting so much time trying to make sense out of this world, we should give thanks and praise for the Kingdom to come through His Son and through His sacrifice.
Lost was a bold and stimulating show. I'm not sure we've had anything like it before on television. And if you didn't get all your questions answered I understand how that can be frustrating. But, to quote the Princess Bride, Get used to dissapointment. We aren't promised the answers to all our questions in this life. We're only promised a life to come, where the answer probably don't matter to us nearly as much as we think.
Happy Monday,
Pastor Bill
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