HomeCommentaryTake a Risk: Live a Great Story

Take a Risk: Live a Great Story

Date:

Related stories

What we get wrong about Satanism — and why it matters

A communication professor explores Satanism, media literacy and why public institutions should apply the same standards to all religious traditions.

65 years later, my childhood baseball glove still catches memories of my father

A columnist reflects on childhood memories, baseball, family and faith after rediscovering the baseball glove his father gave him more than 60 years ago.

Education cuts threaten Bible colleges and seminaries, not just ‘woke’ programs

New federal education policies could threaten theology and ministry programs, raising concerns about the future of religious education and pastoral care.

Our Sponsors

Reading Time: 3 minutes

Take a Risk: Live a Great Story

By Paul Graves

Let’s fire up our imagination together for a moment. Picture a long line of people standing in the rain, some holding umbrellas. People of many colors and ages waiting in the rain. This is a real photograph! Now read the photo’s caption:


“Almost 5,000 queued up for hours in the rain at a swabbing event in Worcester (MA), to get tested to see if they were a match to save the life of a 5-year-old boy fighting a rare cancer after parents asked for help.”


This and other “great story” photos were sent to me the other day, just after I had chosen to explore great stories in this column. I was prodded in this direction by a brief quote by my favorite spiritual guide, Franciscan monk Richard Rohr:
        

“Without the great stories that free us, remain trapped in small cultural and private worlds. True transcendence frees us from the tyranny of I Am and the idolatry of We Are.”

A 14-century mystic, Meister Eckhart, said it this way: “God is not found in the soul by adding anything, but by the process of subtraction.”
        

Great stories free us! Great stories move us to imagine beyond our petty self-preoccupations, beyond our living circumstances, beyond our destructive biases. I’m convinced that even those of us whose imaginations can soar beyond ourselves are still capable of writing ourselves into greater stories than we’ve settled for.


For those who seek to be Jesus-followers, the Christmas story is the beginning of a Great Story. When God became flesh (incarnation) as Jesus, a new, great story of unconditional love began to take shape. We stumble along trying to live that story even as our attitudes and actions too easily diminish its power.


Fortunately, our efforts to add to or diminish the story of unconditional love are never the final world. If they were, it wouldn’t be such a great story after all. It would be dependent only on what we do or don’t do, or on what we understand or don’t understand.


Any story deserving of being “great” is ultimately formed by life forces we may influence in small ways, but can never control. Our “I Am” egos or our “We Are” tribal needs can, with courageous imaginations, be harnessed to embody love-generated forgiveness, or selfless sacrifice.


But those same egos and tribal needs can shrink our spirits into small boxes of anger, fear, political and religious pettiness. In those moments, our Great Story becomes merely a sad footnote to a story we don’t really believe is ours to embrace.


Some years ago, now retired United Methodist pastor from Texas, Rev. Eston Williams, contributed a sentence to God’s Great Story that I’ve tried to live in my own way: “At the end of the day, I’d rather be excluded for who I include, than be included for who I exclude.” When we exclude people for our own self-limiting reasons, we also diminish the Great Story’s next chapter.

Faith traditions of all flavors, including my own, have very sketchy histories of contributing to a Great Story of unconditional love, hope, justice and peace. Sometimes we write spectacularly courageously loving chapters.


Sometimes those chapters are dismal reminders of how selfish and cruel we can be. They are all part of the very uneven Great Story humanity tries to write. But it’s not ours to write all on our own!


Our imaginations and spiritual courage can move us to reach out to other people, even to the earth, to our God. Together, we can write chapters, or simply footnotes, that reflect a Great Story we can live into.
        

Perhaps we can be humble enough to learn from this “Great Story” prayer found on a church wall in Mexico a long time ago:
        

“Give us, Señor (God), a little sunk a little happiness, and some work. Give us a heart to comfort those in pain. Give us the ability to be good, strong, wise, and free, so that we may be as generous with others as we are with ourselves. Finally, Señor, let us all live as your own one family. Amen.”

Paul Graves
Paul Graves
In March 2026, Paul will have completed 30 years as a faith/values writer, and he has plans to keep writing! After almost 37 years in Sandpoint, ID, Paul and his wife moved to Hillsboro, OR in March 2025, to be close to their son and family. They live in a retirement community, where Paul’s professional back as a retired United Methodist pastor and also a retired geriatric social worker, have been welcomed and are grist for the writing-mill on matters of spirituality, politics and aging.
0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted