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Life Amid the Ruin

Don’t miss the forest for the falling trees.

Rick Szuecs / Source Images: Abstract Aerial Art / Getty

Two sentences from Richard Powers’s masterful novel The Overstory have echoed in my thoughts of late: “Trees fall with spectacular crashes. But planting is silent and growth is invisible.”

We live in a season of spectacular crashes. Hundreds of thousands of lives have been lost to COVID-19. Economies have fallen into shambles. Businesses have shuddered and collapsed. Churches and nonprofits are closing their doors. We do not yet know what might be the long-term consequences for the global body of Christ, for the poor and vulnerable, or for social order and human flourishing.

Of course, “spectacular crashes” capture our attention. They are startling and harrowing and fascinating all at once. But if we focus on what is dying, we may miss the slow and subtle rise of what is coming to life.

We may miss small groups and churches drawing closer in a time of need. Ministries finding new ways to serve and encourage. Communities remembering how to care for one another. Children recognizing that life is sacred and meant to be lived with purpose. Families rediscovering the joy of being present to one another. Countless men and women no longer too distracted or busy or proud to ask where life comes from and what its purpose might be.

It reminds me of the biblical episode in which many Israelites returned from exile and began to rebuild the temple in Jerusalem. Those who recalled its former splendor lamented how the new temple seemed, at first, so meager. God tells the prophet Zechariah that his people should not “despise the day of small things” (Zech. 4:10).

The beginnings of the second temple were so humble that men and women wept in despair. How could they celebrate such a small thing amid so much ruin? Yet the structure would stand for centuries and became, under Herod, one of the most magnificent buildings in the ancient world.

What temple are we building amid the wreckage today? We rightly mourn the suffering and the loss of life. Magnificent trees are crashing to earth. But when we look back 30 years from now, what new things will have been birthed in this moment? If the church remembers its first love, if it follows in the footsteps of Christ, then it will bring life out of this death.

With your partnership, CT will be here to tell that story. Let’s work together to nurture those “small beginnings,” so we can all look back someday and marvel at what our God has done.

Timothy Dalrymple is president and CEO of Christianity Today. Follow him on Twitter @TimDalrymple_.

Also in this issue

Our two-part cover package this issue outlines the alarming reality that marriage, long caught in a tug of war over its meaning and place in Western society, is no longer even an appealing option for most young couples. And the decline of matrimony is not limited to North America or certain European countries; it’s happening worldwide. Sociologists Mark Regnerus, W. Bradford Wilcox, and Alysse ElHage argue that marriage hasn’t changed. Rather, our expectations for it have, and the church may be its last defense.

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