We live in an age where incredible scientific advancements take place everyday. Take GRIN, the acronym for (G) genetic engineering, (R) robotics, (I) information technology and (N) nanotechnology. The human genome has been mapped. Nanotechnology is constructing miniscule machines that can deliver inter-cellular messages or make molecular level repairs. Astrophysicists have mapped the curvature of the universe, delved into black holes, listened to the echoes of the Big Bang. Scientific inquiry and experiment have revealed the "hows" and "whys" and "whats" never before known.
We think we're so smart. We think we have a handle on how the universe works.
So why did the builders of the new Yankee Stadium spend five hours and $50,000 digging through two feet of concrete? They did this to extract a David Ortiz Red Sox jersey that had been secretly buried in the concrete floor of the visiting team's dug out. A construction worker, an unrepentant Red Sox fan, had slipped the jersey into the concrete in order to permanently "jinx" the new Yankee stadium. The story of the jersey finally came to light because another construction worker who had seen the shirt go into the slab got worried and confessed: "I don't want to be responsible for sinking the franchise," he said. The stadium, a 1.3 billion dollar project, was brought to a screeching halt; the glowing new future for the Yankees was endangered; immediate, expensive action was taken: why? Because everyone believed in the jinxing power of a piece of cloth submerged down in a concrete floor in a locker room.
That was one high-powered hex!
Or not.
No one can completely escape what has been called "magical thinking" We "knock on wood," throw spilled salt over our shoulders, can't resist reading our horoscopes, always take notice of a "Friday the 13th."
Little children have that special "blankie" or stuffed animal that magically imparts peace and serenity. But big corporations hire specialists to organize the "feng shui" in their work spaces. Musician George Michael bought the Steinway piano that John Lennon composed his best know work on: "Imagine." Michael ships this piano off to places that are in need of some kind of spiritual support: to New Orleans after Katrina; to Virginia Tech after the shootings. The piano is put on public display, with its pedigree, open for any and all to sit down and plunk out a few notes, to seek out a bit of solace in its noteworthy presence.
No matter how much scientific knowledge we acquire about the world we live in, physical reality is never enough. The human spirit knows there is always more to be revealed, that there is something more out there if we could only lift the veil.
Paul's speech to the Athenians gathered at the elite Court of the Areopagus was designed to get his audience thinking about that inner yearning for "something more," that "groping" for the "unknown God." But Paul also warned them that there was a difference between religiosity and righteousness. The God who created the universe, who gave life to human beings, "does not live in shrines made by human hands" (v.24) and is not "an image formed by the art and imagination of mortals" (v.29). Idols of gold, silver, or stone will never contain God, and can never move beyond the "magical" to real faithfulness…