Colouring within the lines
2 Samuel 7: 1-17
Have you ever sat in a kindergarten class? Watched kids attempt to gain control over the paint and pencils and stencils? Heard the teacher's prompting and the kids consternation about colouring in the lines?
I like colouring in the lines - I like the neat tidy ordered controlled aspects - the picture is predrawn all you have to do it add your colour. So you feel useful but not revolutionary.
In this weeks reading I see David doing the equivalent of colouring in the lines - he's got the wealth and because of that the time to ponder the artistic. He decides it'd be a good thing to build God a house. After all that's what you do - that's where the lines seem to be drawn already. Conquer the country, subdue your enemy, amke yourself king and give glory to your god. Controlled, predetemined, safe.
Enter the (reluctant) artist - Nathan - who gets stuck with the vision/dream which causes him to glimpse another picture. But this picture's got a dodgy outline, it's unclear and uncertain - not a house (bayit) but a household (bayit). There's a promise that if you stand back far enough it'll look alright. But we have to stand up close to add our colour so all those assurances aren't that helpful really. How will David know when he's done enough? How will he be sure it's what was wanted in this time and place? What's he to do with the stockpile of cedar?
As we've waited this advent I've wondered - am I just colouring in the lines of orthodoxy and certainty or can I summon up the courage to go outside the lines and not be sure at all? For what this passage points to in the end is the truth that it is God's picture not mine, it's God's mercy and goodness which gives me the colours to use and the pictures to paint. It's not a paint by numbers it's an invitation to close my eyes and to dare to colour the world with God's hope.

