
I think it was C.S. Lewis who tells of the time he was approached by a woman complaining about a church member who, in her mind, was unpleasant, uncouth, and just plain disagreeable.
Lewis’ shrewd response nails it. “Yes,” he advised, “but you should have seen him before he became a Christian.”
In my last post, https://climbingthewalls.org/sermon-christianity-a-well-known-stranger/, I pointed out that sin, contrary to common thought, actually means “the state of being separated from God,” sin being a relational term.
I also pointed out that the mythological story of the Garden of Eden and the Fall in the first three chapters of Genesis marks the symbolic movement from a once perfect relationship with our Creator to the alienated one we now experience here East of Eden.
But does this fall from grace constitute the final word? Are we destined, in other words, to live in a desacralized world devoid of hope or promise?









