Hebrews 12:2 tells us that Jesus "endured the cross" because of the "joy set before him." Dr. Ryken quotes Norman Geisler, who wrote the following:
God is not a celestial Scrooge who hates to see his children enjoy themselves. Rather, he is the kind of Father who is ready to say, 'Let us eat and make merry; for this my son was dead and is alive again; he was lost and is found' (Luke 15:24). (Norman Geisler, "The Christian as Pleasure Seeker," Christianity Today, 25 September 1975, p.11)
Can there be any doubt that God both enjoys us and has a desire for us to enjoy the good gifts he has given us? Certainly there are forms of mindless amusement that I think we should question. Here's my personal laundry list of things that are a waste of time:
- Soap operas and most "reality TV" shows.
- Computer solitaire and other mindless games.
- Pulp fiction such as your average romance novel.
- Magazines dedicated to the life and times of media personalities.
That's just my opinion and I'm sure other people could think of things I do that are a waste of time. But I do believe there is a difference between relaxing, recreation, and "vegging." To "vegetate," the way I define it, is to put mind and body into neutral and let life pass you buy. It is to simply bide your time. It is a way to just get through the day. This mentality, to me, is different from relaxing, "visiting" with people, or particpating in recreational activities.
Dr. Ryken talks about three wrong-headed attitudes that might cause us to look down on the enjoyment of the arts:
- Asceticism: "denying pleasure is inherently virtuous"
- "...a distorted work ethic in which only hard work is a legitimate use of time"
- Scientific Utilitarianism: "scorn for anything that is not useful in mastering the physical world or making money." (Leland Ryken, The Liberated Imagination, p.88)
Dr. Ryken argues that the arts are, at least in part, for our enjoyment or pleasure. There is nothing unbiblical about this. There is a positive quality of life that arises from the enjoyment of good music, fine artwork, an imaginitive novel, or a well-conceived movie. That is not to say that the arts are or should be purely for entertainment. Robert Frost wrote that a poem "begins in delight and ends in wisdom...It begins in delight...and ends in a clarification of life." (Robert Frost, "The Figure a Poem Makes," in Writers on Writing, ed. Walter Allen, p.22)
Dr. Ryken suggests that Christians have "no adequate theory of leisure and play." (Ryken, p.92) He believes that this is a stewardship issue. What part should recreation play in the stewardship of our minds, bodeis and souls? What part should the arts play in that endeavor? In my opinion, these are important questions we need be asking.
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