Intriguing. In beautiful calligraphic font the word “Believe” adorned the exterior of buildings and formed the logo of the 83rd edition of the legendary Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade.
I recall looking forward as a kid to the spectacle on each of those fourth Thursday mornings of November: the massive balloons, the sparkling and blaring marching bands, and the grinning and waving celebrities. As I’ve aged, the parade holds less fascination, but I caught some of it this year.
That theme – “Believe” – kept catching my eye, and burst into significance at the finale. Santa always concludes the parade and leads a scarf and mitten-bundled choir in a holiday tune written just for the occasion. The song that exploded from their overjoyed faces extolled the beauty of believing in the imagination and believing in the savior of Christmas – Santa Claus.
Now before I appear cynical (too late!), I must admit that the music was beautiful and the aura of Christmas joy was developed generously. But what I was watching seemed absurd. It defied the intolerance of our day. On mainstream media, while undergirded by a large corporation, was a blatant preaching of the gospel of believing in a person no one has ever seen (SCROOGE ALERT: much less, does not exist). It was a very “religious” moment. And I doubt there will be any public protest of such a public display of faith in the unseen.
I came away from this scene with a surprisingly positive compulsion. People were gathered together (some 3 million actually in attendance, with millions more via television) and uplifted by the prospect of believing in something which provided hope and joy in a world whose darkness threatens to suffocate on a daily basis. Humanity has never ceased to hunger and thirst for something and someone beyond themselves to inject hope and joy into life. It is simply the case that we have often looked in the wrong places and invested our faith in dead-end kingdoms.
Humanity does not lack the capacity to believe, but lacks focus on the object of belief. “Believe” is an imperative begging for an object. In the same way that “spiritual” is a warm, yet vague, expression, “believe” is a noble verb, desperately seeking completion. Believing in just anything is the stuff of fools.
Read the Gospels and note the specific targets of belief: the words of Jesus, the works of Jesus, the testimony of witnesses, the Son, the Father. et. al. Often the phrasing is “believe in” or “believe that.” Faith cannot remain homeless. It must reside somewhere.
While thumbing through the catalog of faith objects, be sure to track performance. Who or what has proven to be faith-worthy? How has that Santa thing worked for you when terminal illness steps across the threshold? What success has self-trust brought when depression molests? Has wealth or career been your anchor when relationships explode? Is the genuine blessing of family even enough when considering your eternal status?
Jesus said to them, “I am the bread of life; whoever comes to me shall not hunger, and whoever believes in me shall never thirst.”
John 6:35
By all means, Believe. Give your belief a home. Better yet, give it a mansion. Believe in Him who made all things, and makes all things new.
