Don’t you just love the “delete” keys on all the electronic gadgets we have these days? Of all the keys and buttons that adorn my life, the delete key outshines them all. For instance, the brief sense of relief a snooze button offers can’t begin to compare with the enduring satisfaction the delete key brings with it.
The Redemptive Power of Keyboards ~
The power to obliterate a word, or a phrase, or even whole documents with a single touch is almost heady. Delete keys offer an opportunity for verbal redemption that you just can’t get in other situations. Like that time I decided to share a little sarcastic redneck humor in a small Southern Baptist country church where I had been invited to speak. All that my
lame attempt to lighten the somber atmosphere did was to give all the deacons on the front row an opportunity to pull out a look of indignant astonishment … You know, that expression they keep in reserve in case anyone ever did something as grotesquely reprehensible as a preacher showing up to preach with just an open collared shirt and no jacket or tie.
Correcting writing mistakes has always been challenging. Most of my academic and early professional career took place back when producing a printed page required the use of machines called “typewriters”. They might seem archaic now, but for decades they were an indispensable piece of equipment for students and office workers. Typewriters were paragons of mechanical ingenuity, but they couldn’t stop people like me from hitting the wrong key, which presented a major problem.
Good Idea – Disappointing Performance ~
Most of us had nothing more than “typing erasers” to correct mistakes back then.
Ostensibly, one could use this ingenious device to eradicate any inadvertent error and deftly brush away any telltale residue. But the truth is, the “correction” procedure often only made things worse. The texture of rubbery stuff that was supposed to magically remove the problem seemed to be a mixture of Army surplus WWII jeep tires and construction grade sandpaper.
Two questions always made the process interesting . . . How many strokes would it take before the “correction” transformed an otherwise pristine document to a piece of waste paper sporting an ugly dark splotch with a hole in the middle of it? And how long would it take before a state of mild irritation escalated into something just short of a full blown psychotic episode?
In spite of our grand intentions and aspirations of perfection, we human beings have an inherent tendency to make wrong moves that have unintended consequences in lots of
areas that have nothing to do with our word-processing skills. There are obvious reasons why people like me love delete keys, but there’s something more than the corrective measures that we love about them. We also cherish the deceptive appearance of perfection that they allow. Let me explain.
Perfection – A Crafted Illusion ~
A few years ago, I published a small devotional book. While I deeply appreciated the opportunity to produce it, I must offer a disclaimer. I could proudly announce, in a humble sort of way, of course, that there were no typos in the book, no erasure marks, no misspellings, and no grammatical issues. Just looking at the printed pages alone might suggest that the linguistic and typing skills were incredibly impressive, but nothing could be farther from the truth. Its current condition was achieved only because skilled editors read every word on every page over and over with the sole objective of identifying anything that didn’t meet the publisher’s standards. And that process didn’t even begin until after it had already been scrutinized and approved by the best proofreader I’ve ever met.
The book ultimately went to final publication in a condition that publishers demand and readers expect. You might even call it another example of what some might claim as literary perfection (hey, a guy can still dream, right?). But in reality, that objective was
only made possible because those wonderful little ‘delete’ keys exist. Which makes one wonder, what if they didn’t? What if everything we write had to remain just as we originally wrote it? Suppose we could no longer present the aura of excellence that delete keys allow? If we don’t want others to see a relatively harmless misspelling or typo because our fingers flew in the wrong direction on a keyboard, think about this …What about all the bad moves we’ve made in much more significant areas? What do we do about those?
Writing Our Own Book ~
Like most people, you may not consider yourself a writer. You may not even be among those who feel compelled to post their inspirational thoughts and political opinions on social media … We might not find videos of you doing your favorite dance moves on TikTok ... Instagram may not even be harboring pictures of you cuddling with your pet iguana – and thankfully, the world wide web may never reveal the impact that yesterday’s breakfast taco had on your digestive tract. But like it or not, along with everyone else on the planet, you are, in a sense, writing your own comprehensive, unabridged autobiography.
The finished product will include every place we’ve gone, everything we’ve done and all the words, thoughts, and feelings that accompanied them. We can’t opt out, nothing is excluded, and we add another few pages every day. And here’s the kicker . . . The world’s technological geniuses will never be able to offer backspace buttons or delete keys for the strokes we’re adding to that story. The final product will be submitted to the Omniscient Judge of the Universe to determine whether it’s acceptable. Much like the world’s publishers, He will compare our work to the required standard – flawless perfection.
The Greatest Correction Procedure Ever ~
When I first encountered the One who will judge the final manuscript of the life I was writing, the pages were full of errors I’d made and marred with mistakes I had tried in vain to fix. There were dark splotches and holes everywhere. I handed Him the mess I’d made of the life He had given me and instead of trying to repair the mess and clean up the ragged trash I handed Him, He offered an entirely different way to deal with it. Paul described it like this:
And you, being dead in your trespasses and the uncircumcision of your flesh, He has made alive together with Him, having forgiven you all trespasses, having wiped out the handwriting of requirements that was against us, which was contrary to us. And He has taken it out of the way, having nailed it to the cross. (Colossians 2:13–14 NKJV)
And you, who once were alienated and enemies in your mind by wicked works, yet now He has reconciled in the body of His flesh through death, to present you holy, and blameless, and above reproach in His sight … (Colossians 1:21–22 NKJV)
Jesus didn’t just cover up the dark splotches of my failed efforts or try to patch up the empty holes in my life. He gave me a brand new page – one with no typos, no misspellings, no incomplete sentences, and no sinful, senseless foolishness. But the best news of all is that He starts me off with a fresh page every day and continually makes corrections as I write.
There’s no mistake about it. Jesus lives to transform painfully chaotic stories like mine into prize-winning masterpieces – and what He’s done for me, the Author of Perfection will do for anyone who comes to Him in faith with an open and repentant heart.
“TWEETABLES” ~ Click to tweet and share from the quotes below. Each one links directly back to this article through Twitter . . .
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- The final product will be submitted to the Omniscient Judge of the Universe to determine whether it’s acceptable. Much like the world’s publishers, He will compare our work to the required standard – flawless perfection. @GallaghersPen (Click here to Tweet)
- When I first encountered the One who will judge the final manuscript of the life I was writing, the pages were full of errors I’d made and marred with mistakes I had tried in vain to fix. @GallaghersPen (Click here to Tweet)
- Jesus didn’t just cover up the dark splotches of my failed efforts or try to patch up the empty holes in my life. He gave me a brand new page with no typos, no misspellings, no incomplete sentences, and no sinful, senseless foolishness. @GallaghersPen (Click here to Tweet)
- There’s no mistake about it. Jesus lives to transform painfully chaotic stories like mine into prize-winning masterpieces – and what He’s done for me, He’ll do for anyone who comes to Him in faith with an open and repentant heart. @GallaghersPen (Click here to Tweet)
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