Wednesday, August 22, 2018

THE MESSAGE OF CHRISTOPHER ROBIN: COME AWAY WITH ME



I went to see this movie with no real expectations, as I did not grow up watching much of the kids cartoon show, or reading the books.  For some reason however, I felt drawn to the theaters to see this film. That morning I awoke with some real life questions, and even had a conversation with God about them... questions about life that I found direct responses to in Christopher Robin.

With that piece of background information, I will skip ahead to sitting in the theater before the trailers rolled, where I said a prayer, asking “God to show me something through this film.” He more than answered that prayer, that’s for sure.

The film opens to reveal to us a day specific day in the Hundred Acre Wood, it is the day that Pooh and his friends have a farewell party for Christopher Robin. 
I was immediately lost in the Hundred Acre Wood as I watched this first scene of fuzzy creatures, Winnie the Pooh, Tiger, Piglet, Owl etc sitting around a party table, discussing how this was the day that Christopher Robin was leaving, and for where they knew not. You may recall this from the books, or the cartoon, but having no real Winnie the Pooh history, I was more oblivious than his friends as to “Where he was going” and “why he had to leave”. Through the conversation we discover that this is the day that C.R. is leaving childhood and all of his fantastical stuffed animal friends behind.

This movie is so nostalgic, even if you never were a big Winnie the Pooh fan, the feelings it evokes are those that any person who has taken the journey from Childhood to a becoming an Adult, can relate to. It makes us think about our own personal childhoods, and makes us ask the questions “When did we leave childhood behind? And why did we have to leave?”

The first conversation between Pooh and Christopher Robin touched my heart and made me think. Pooh goes on a private walk with Christopher after the cake is eaten, knowing that this is their last day together in the wood. They stop at a bridge overlooking the serene stream that flows under it. 
Here is where the boy and his stuffed bear friend talk about what their favorite things to do are, and Christopher says that his favorite thing to do is "Nothing"...to which Pooh responds something like, “Ahh yes, because I often find that when I am doing nothing I find myself doing the very best of something.”



It made me think about what God has personally been showing me, and that is that I don’t have to constantly be creating, or doing something “productive” to be happy. Sometimes God is just looking for us to get to that place of emptiness, where we no longer feel like life is “living us” but we are “living it”. What is one of the things about being a child that we miss when we are adults? Their freedom... I believe that deep inside we envy it. 
Kids aren’t so tied down to responsibilities, pressured to meet deadlines, and they are less concerned about what other people think. They seem to skip through their days, taking everything as it comes.  I believe that as we grow, and have to take on new responsibilities, we find ourselves walking a tight rope of fear and becoming more performance driven. This is a part of life that seems inevitable, considering the weight of life. But there is something deep inside that desires that relationship of trust, like we once had in the garden, when life was less complicated, and we didn’t have to work so hard to get by.
Children represent this innocence. It is an innocence that the world is trying to steal, and this movie portrays beautifully.

From this moment onward, I saw Winnie the Pooh in the light of being a Savior Character, and honestly some of the emotions I was feeling made it hard to breathe. I felt overwhelmed by the presence of God in the movie theater.  I’m not a big crier, and I tried to hold the tears inside, but a few found a way to break through my barricade and stream down my face. I wiped them away quickly, as I didn’t want to be embarrassed, as my Mom and her friend were sitting in the seats beside me. But I’ve never felt so touched by a movie before. 
It seemed like every word that came out of Pooh’s mouth was deep revelation for me. 

Something that God has been walking me through these last few months is “disconnecting” and “living in the moment”, “awareness”, and “doing less” to “experience more”. In this season I have had my moments of feeling less productive and purposeless. But this film spoke to me as if God was saying “When you allow yourself just to BE, when you lay down your life for me, you will find it"…Sometimes it is in the most unlikely season that the most wonderful things happen…When we empty out our buckets, feeling, like there’s nothing left, when everything seems still...then the very best shows up and the most awesome adventures take place.

Something amazing about seeing Winnie the Pooh as a Christ/Holy Spirit character: Where the road ends and another begins…God is calling us to “be” to “come away” with Him. When we simply enjoy His presence, let the world fade away and not let work consume us…we find that what might seem like “doing nothing” can be the door to the best of something.


The Power of Simple Love
Much like Christopher we can lose our way, get caught up in the distractions of life, and get pulled away from our truest source of happiness,and that is communion with God. 
I like this movie so much, because it is a movie that reminds us of the power of simple love. We grow up, put down childish things, and yet we shouldn't lose our childlike faith. 

The love of Winnie the Pooh for Christopher is so moving; It would seem that he has supernatural powers.No matter the distance, Pooh able to reach C.R. when he needs Him most. It reminds me of God, who is never late, but always on time, to reach us when we need Him most. 
A few of my favorite lines from the movie, is when Pooh and Christopher meet for the first time since his childhood, and Mr. Robin asks Winnie "How did you recognize me?!" Pooh responds, "You look the same". "I look nothing like I used to."
"It is still you, looking out." I love how Pooh hasn't changed, and yet though C.R. has changed so much, Pooh still sees the child inside. It makes me think that God is this way, just like a parent, He sees who we are inside and remembers who we were meant to be, even when life gets cloudy, His plans for us remain the same, and no matter how far we stray, His compassion and forgiveness is constant.

It is through hanging out with his old friends, that Christopher Robin is changed. Pooh never corrects him, but Christopher becomes more and more like the child he once was, and the Christopher Robin that Pooh always cherished. 
And when I say this, I don't mean that he throws responsibility to the wind, nor leaves his adult life and family behind....but rather that his perspective and attitude towards everything changes.
This is the same way it is when we spend time in God's presence, we are changed, remade, refreshed, and our fears flee as we let Him rub off on us. We become innocent once again.
This is why I think that this movie in many ways is a Redemption Tale.


God Never Forgets
In the beginning of the film when C.R. is leaving the Hundred Acre Wood, Pooh tells Christopher that He hopes he will not forget him. Christopher promises that he will not. In that scene I was reminded of Peter's interaction with Jesus before He went to die. Peter insists that he will not deny Christ, and yet when things get tough...he does.
This theme is the same with Christopher and Pooh. When Pooh visits him as an adult in London, he informs Robin that his friends have gone missing and asks him for his help to find them. Christopher says that he hasn't thought of Pooh nor his friends in many years, to which W.P. responds "I thought of you every day".
This touched me, because it made me think of how much God loves us and remembers all of our adventures with him...How he thinks of us every day, and longs for us to interact with him...and yet we forget about Him. The love of Christ is so deep, so wide, so soft, so innocent, so pure...Pooh's uncomplicated, and un-demanding love for Christopher was a reflection to me of God's own love for us. Let us not deny God's love, or ignore it, when it awaits our daily response.



We Let Go of God
In this movie there is a scene where Christopher Robin gets very frustrated at Pooh. The two of them are trudging through a foggy Hundred Acre Wood, trying to find Pooh's friends. C.R. has given Winnie the Pooh a compass to guide them North, but Pooh never looks down at the compass to check if they've gone off track, so the two of them walk around in circles for hours. Christopher Robin really takes it out on Pooh, while our bear stands there very contained and still. In his harsh comments he says something about having to let go of the things that hold you back, in other words he is saying that time and his work is important than hundred acre wood relationships.To Which Pooh responds, "Did you let me go?"
This is also something that I feel like we have to ask ourselves...When things get tough, do we blame God, or do we get closer to Him? God's love for us is pure, and sometimes it is in the the most  frustrating moments of our lives, the seasons where we feel like God is leading us in circles, that we find that what matters most is not a physical destination, our own timing, but of course character grown and learning to trust Him.
God is all powerful, and He nothing is impossible for Him. We sometimes imagine that His thoughts are our thoughts, and His ways our ways...but his thoughts are higher than our thoughts, and His ways more perfect than our ways.



Becoming Like A Child
Christopher Robin has allowed the cares of this world to detour Him from simple faith. I feel like that is something that we can relate to.
He has to humble himself in order to grow. He has to bend low, stick his head in a tiny door in a tree, get stuck, fall down, and in some ways act carefree as a child to get back on track.
Often times we follow after the world's way and try to climb the man man ladder to success, only to discover that there isn't any true joy in this. The way to the Kingdom of God is truly through becoming as a little child and following His heart.

"Truly I tell you, unless you change and become like little children, you will never enter the kingdom of God." - Jesus, Matthew 18:3

And again He says, "Forbid not the little children to come unto me, for of such, is the kingdom of God." Matthew 19:14

For those who exalt themselves will be humbled, and those who humble themselves will be exalted. Matthew 23:12 NIV

Thanks for reading my thoughts on the message of Christopher Robin.
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Tuesday, August 14, 2018

Ghost in a Shell: Movie Lessons





This is quite a disturbing film, at least for my personality. It is pretty heavy. It's definitely not a refreshing weekend watch. But although my stomach felt like hurling I decided it would be worth my time to suffer through. After all, it had pretty good acting, an interesting story line, and I'm all into underlining messages you can find in unique Sci Fi. 
Honestly, the reason I couldn't pull myself away was that it seemed to me that this movie is more than meets the eye. I would go so far as to say it is probably prophetic.

The story takes places in a futuristic Japan where technology has become more integrated with humanity than ever before. There are a few concept similarities to Robo Cop and the movie Source Code, and I can say this without giving away any Spoilers. 
The main character is a robot with a human brain, created by a corporation that is all about human/robot advancement. The idea was to create a robot with a soul, hence the movie title "Ghost in a Shell". The film is about this character who is more or less commissioned as an advanced law enforcer and body hunter for this prestigious company.

The problem is, "Major" as she is called, doesn't have any memory of her old life, only the new, empty one, that she leads. And she hates it. The questions of her purpose, true identity, and mission unfold as the story progresses before our eyes.
This may seem like a pretty simple plot, and of course there is a Villain....or two...But to be honest, I believe this movie is not so much an action flick as advertised, it felt more like a psychological experiment to me. It was a real trip-pity trip.

There's nothing so weird as seeing a brain enter a robotic body, it makes me cringe every time. It's super disgusting. To me this movie raises all sorts of questions, and I felt like the screenwriter/filmmakers were curious about what sort of reactions they would get because they knew that they were creating a glimpse into the future we will one day experience.
In this movie, we are the souls weaving in and out of the scenes that flash before our eyes, and asking the deep questions that this being evokes. This movie speaks to our moral conscience more than anything else.



Thoughts from my Ghost: 

In Ghost in a Shell, the scientists that work with Major are always reminding her that she is more than a robot, she is still a human, because she has a brain, which they believe houses her soul/ghost. 
I think this film is super spiritual, as are most SC FI stories. It's not since I watched a holocaust story, that I felt these kind of emotions that this flick brought to the surface. 
But why? I was reminded that we are God's creation, made to represent His glory, and the works of the enemy are to destroy our view of ourselves and our Creator. Because when you think about it, the holocaust was pure evil, and the forms of torture that went on were intentional disrespect against God's people, down to the tattoo markings they received. 
What this character experiences is pure torture, to separate a brain from it's body, is horrific. Beyond obvious reasons and disrespect to God's perfect creation; a person's spirit/ghost is not just housed in the brain, it is housed in the entire body, and looks exactly like the outward shell. 

The main character feels soulless, despite these reminders of her mental humanity. She rushes into things, like a rebel, which constantly results in her destruction and being pieced back together. 
She lives in a world where body modification is all the hype and fashion. People are getting robotic limbs, not because they lost their human ones, but because they want to be more efficient in their jobs, or more interesting to the opposite sex. In this fallen futuristic world, the body remains the focus, more than the soul. Most of the modifications are not pretty, nor natural in appearance. 





* We are fearfully and wonderfully made. We are unique beings, both natural and supernatural. Psalm 139: 13 For you created my inmost being; you knit me together in my mother's womb. I will praise you, because I am fearfull and wonderfully made; your works are wonderful, I know that well. My frame was not hidden from you, when I was made in the secret place, when I was woven together in the depths of the earth, there your eyes saw my unformed body. All the days ordained for me were written in your book, even before one of them came to be.

* Man can only imitate what God has already mastered. And playing God leads to destruction, as we have seen over and over again in history. The problem is that the business owners, politicians, artists and college graduates of our society view success as coming away from the simple beauty and creating something more fantastical. What if happiness came from embracing and becoming more aware of the beauty that already exists, instead of draining nature's resources only to create something that feeds their pockets or egos? The earth is dying, people's souls are going into hiding, and yet we think that we have a more advanced world? I do not see an entirely positive evolution.

* We all long for a state of immortality/incorruptibility,  to "evolve" beyond our "fallen man". This is a desire for our "glorified bodies" which we will receive in the next life. These "shells"/bodies are beautiful, but our spirits won't always be confined to them.
1 Corinthians 15: 53-55 says: For this corruptible must put on incorruption, and this mortal body will put on immortality. So when this corruptible shall have put on incorruption and this mortal has put on immortality, then shall the saying be brought to pass that is written: Death is swallowed up in victory. O death, where is your sting? O grace, where is your victory?.

* Without belief in our true value and purpose we are "useless", but through love we grow and find our vision. Love means sometimes getting our hands dirty, or putting our heart on the line. The world has lost the true meaning of love, and are ignorant as how to receive and give love; they are afraid of it. Love is patient, love is kind, love is long suffering, love thinks the best, love respects, love hopes, love forgives, love covers a multitude of sins, love means more than acceptance, it sometimes means embracing the unknown. 
It is so important that we love ourselves, and this can only be done when we understand what it means to love God, who first loved us. We can only properly love ourselves, when we understand our value, and that value comes from our identity in God. 

* It is important for us to be healthy in mind, body, and spirit. Most humans don't recognize that they have a soul, anymore. They don't understand the inward workings of the heart. In a world that is becoming more and more dependent in technology, one cannot help but wonder if we are losing some of our humanity to it. People no longer have meaningful conversations, or connect as easily on an intimate level. As relationships are replaced with social media friends, and people converse less and less....a part of the human brain is not only stifled, but handicapped. We were created with emotions, that are meant to be realized, and used to determine the state of the soul. People are no longer recognizing symptoms of unhealthiness. 




* Man wasn't created to be alone, or to feel alone.
The world is becoming a lonelier place, as people disconnect from the communities around them, and plug into a world of technology that focuses mainly on the outward appearance more than the condition of the heart. People are no longer embracing the realities of humanity, but rather trying to create a world where everything is flawless, and emotions are weakness. It is in our humanity that we find our true purpose, not by disconnecting or ignoring it.  We are reminded that as humans we long to belong and were made to feel a part of something bigger than ourselves.

* We are all God's creation/Children whom He loves personally. We are not some meaningless beings, we are beautiful creatures, with a divine destiny. We are super-wonderful, intricate, living vessels made in the image of our Creator. God loves us so much more than we imagine, and His love is not shifty like the world's. He made us the way that we are, because we represent so much spiritually in our physicality. The Devil would like us to think we are expendable and unloved

* We no longer live in yesterday, but in today.
The cool thing about this film, is that it reminds us through several lines of dialogue, that we shouldn't be so confined to the memories of who we used to be, because our identity and value is more found in our inherit humanity than in our positions, talents, or deeds. All humans deserve respect and love, because they are humans, eternal beings, and living breathing reflections of the image of God. God is the "beginning and the end" and at the heart of our DNA. True "Science" observes God in mankind and points back to Him.

Romans 1:20 For since the creation of the world God's invisible qualities- His eternal power and divine nature - have been clearly seen, being understood from what he has made, so that people are without excuse.

Thank you for reading my thoughts on this movie, Ghost in the Shell is rated PG 13, Directed by Rupert Sanders, Based on the Comic Book, and stares Scarlett Johansson.

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