
Today marked the end of the Chinese New Year Holiday here in Taiwan. It's always a bit difficult to get myself back into the swing of things after a nice vacation. I spent a week up in Taipei with great friends just relaxing and enjoying my experience, and it reminded me of how precious these moments really are. It's been a month of new beginnings for me. The last three or four years have been an arduous walk through the desert. As I lay that season to rest and prepare for a new beginning, I'm compelled to think about the idea of life and death.
On Friday I was fortunate enough to catch the sky lantern festival in Pingxi. The festival happens once a year where thousands of people release paper lanterns into the night sky. The idea behind it is to write your wishes on a paper lantern, and then release it into the sky hoping that a God will see and grant your desire. As I watched my friends release our lantern, I felt overcome with a sense of thankfulness that moments like these could be written in my memory. It was a bitter sweet moment; I had the chance to reconnect with old friends, meet new ones, and was reminded that I must say goodbye to others. As the five of us stood around this lantern covered in our blessings to family and friends, I had secretly made another wish that this moment could last just a bit longer for all of us - but like many experiences, we must release it and watch as it drifts beyond the horizon.
When we think about time, we think about a line that moves progressively towards a terminal point in which we call death, but everything around us tells us otherwise, that time is like an endless circle. The earth spins on an axis and revolves in an orbit, and end always signifies the beginning of something else, death in winter brings life in spring, night brings another morning. I've watched my own life travel peaks and valleys, always coming full circle to the beginning of another chapter. If all human existence was marked by lines travelling in the same direction, lives would never intersect, we would never experience the pulse of existence, which like a human heart, pumps the flow of energy through a circulatory system in the universe. When I hear about death, it makes me sad, but if in fact all things come full circle, then even the tragedies will find redemption. The idea of the gospel I so much believe in revolves around the concept that death will bring new life. It gives me some sense of comfort and connection with others to know that my life is not a solitary line, but that I am part of something bigger, something that has no end, something that allows experiences to overlap; an infinite number of points circulating together on some greater journey conducted by a greater being.
