“It’s all a matter of perspective.” I have heard that expression at times thorough out my life and have previously pondered it.
Today I am flying from San
Francisco, California, to Charlotte, North Carolina, and I am thinking about
how different one’s perspective of the topography is from a bird’s eye view as
from a walking or driving view. What
appears to be an insurmountable barrier from below, looks like nothing more
than a slight indentation from 30,000 feet above. As we drive along a highway passing through
cities and towns, we have no concept of the vast wilderness that is on either
side of it. We may stand next to a river
watching its flow, but we have no understand of where it comes from or where it
goes. A wind turbine looks like a bit of
a toothpick from the air, but having stood at the base of one, I can tell you
that they are enormous.
My granddaughter accused me this
week of not understanding what it is like to be a child. She doesn’t just think I have forgotten. She thinks I never was a child and went
straight to being a grandmother! She is
seven, so she can be forgiven for this total lack of logic. Actually, I do remember what it is like to be
a child, and that is why I bother to attempt to correct her behaviors. I also remember what it was like to be a
not-yet-mature adult, which is why I was not offended greatly when a grandson
told me that my ideas were out-dated and irrelevant. There is a perspective
with age. One might wish to impart a 70+
year old perspective to a young person, but unfortunately…or maybe
fortunately…we each have to live life and experience some pain and sorrow to
gain perspective from the passage of time.
Gender also impacts perspective. I have been better than most females at
understanding what goes through the male brain.
I generally get along better with a group of men than with a group of
women. I like women and have women
friends with whom I share a deep connection, but trying to function with a
group of women sometimes drives me a little crazy. It’s not that there is anything wrong with
the way men and women think…it is wonderful that both exist. But they come from different perspectives. Something which gets discussed in
mind-numbing detail by women would be quickly decided by a group of men. I was once part of an all-female committee
that spent three meetings discussing what color the napkins should be at an
up-coming event. I didn’t attend the
last of those meetings, because I was afraid I wouldn’t be able to control the
words that came out of my mouth.
Perhaps, the most important
perspective comes from one’s worldview.
How did we get here? Do we have a
purpose? Do our lives have meaning? If so, what is it? I have been at social events where the
discussion has led me to believe that my worldview is quite different than that
of the typical middle-class white person.
I believe there is a God who is creator and sustainer of the
universe. I believe we are here to honor
Him with our lives. I believe He has a
grand design for the world and humanity, and that we each are to play a part in
fulfilling His plan. I believe
everything we think we own, really belongs to Him. It comes from His kindness to us, and we are
responsible to Him for how we use it.
That includes our time, talents, and material resources. I believe God sent His only Son in the person
of Jesus to pay the penalty for our sin and to restore our broken relationship
with Him. This is the perspective that
has impacted my entire life.
If you are reading this, spend
some time thinking about your perspective.