Wednesday, December 10, 2008

charlie brown christmas, my own little cymbalta



I take thee at thy word.
Call me but love, and I'll be new baptiz'd;
Henceforth I never will be Romeo

Here Romeo indicates he believes what Juliet is saying is true. This confession of belief is crucial to Shakespeare's understanding of the proper recipient of love. There can be no doubting, no mistrust; one must have complete faith in the other that nothing is being held back. In our spirituality, we see nothing different. No less than two hundred times Scripture speaks of the importance of belief. "I take thee at thy word," Romeo says, meaning he believes Juliet's invitation, that she will do what she says she will do. Anything less than this complete trust from Romeo would not be love, anything less that pure trust would be a kind of careful negotiation. And careful negotiation isn't love. A person must be willing to be dashed on the rocks or made the fool in exchange for a relationship in order for pure love to take place. And in our spirituality, anything less indicates a question of God's character.


Donald Miller
explaining Romeo and Juliet in terms of Jesus

1 comment:

The Sissykins said...

oh Donald Miller, you would.