Wow! I have just
finished the roller coaster ride that is "Love
Does - Discover a Secretly Incredible Life in an Ordinary World" by Bob Goff I need to take a breath; I need to
wipe the tears from my eyes; I need to give my rib cage a chance to recover
from the belly laughs that erupted at several points along my journey of
reading this wonderful memoir.
I first learned of Bob Goff and his whimsical
approach to living his life and his faith when I read Donald
Miller's "A Million Miles in a Thousand
Years." Bob
and his wife and kids come off in many ways as the heroes of Miller's story
about "Story." After reading about the Goffs, I
wanted to kayak to their place in British Columbia. I wanted to join their New
Years' Day parade in San Diego. At the urging of his friend and fellow author
Miller, attorney Bob Goff has written an extraordinary book. This little gem
captures in 31 wonderfully self-deprecating and self-revealing chapters his
approach to living life to the hilt - taking risks in the name of love - and of
Love. The format is simple and profound. Goff shares an anecdote from his life
or from the life of a family member or friend and then uses that simple
vignette as a metaphor to illuminate a spiritual truth. Each chapter also
follows the format of Bob sharing a truth that he has learned as he has grown
and undergone many "paradigm shifts." "I used to be afraid of
failing at something that really mattered to me, but now I am more afraid of
succeeding at things that do not matter." (Page
25)
While Bob is a follower of Christ, those who do
not embrace the Christian faith need not fear that this book would be a
turn-off. Unlike many "Christian" writers whose unbending orthodoxy
makes those who do not share their particular views want to break out in hives,
Goff is guileless and gentle in the ways in which he lives out and shares his
faith.
While the book is quite West Coast-centric, (Bob
and his family live in San Diego and have a vacation home in British Columbia),
the author reached out to the die hard Bostonian in me with this account of the
advantages of him having been asked to serve as the Consul for the Republic of
Uganda: "At this
point,someone told me about the perks of being a diplomat. First, I would get
some really good license plates. With those, I can literally park anywhere. On
the sidewalk, on the grass, on second base at Fenway Park . . . " (Page 64)
Each chapter packs a punch. In the chapter
entitled "Wow, What a Hit," Goff shares the lifelong impact of a note
that his Little League coach mailed to him after one of the only meaningful
hits of his baseball career. "I
used to think that words spoken about us describe who we are, but now I know
they shape who we are." (Page
84)
A chapter that touched me deeply dealt with the
Goff family's decision to save money to purchase a very expensive painting - a
work of fine art by a well known European artist. The picture depicted an old
man surrounded by family as he entertained them with a puppet. I will let Bob
Goff describe what happened when he came by the fancy gallery to pick up his
long-anticipated purchase:
"When I walked into the gallery, there were
two paintings waiting for me, two exact paintings of 'The Puppeter.' I didn't understand 'Why are there
two paintings?' I asked the guy with the muddled accent. 'Well,' he said, managing with absolute
ease to sound condescending and slick, 'ze one on the left is ze real
one. It's museum qualeetay. It's very expensive, almost priceless. You don't
want to hang ze original where it might get damaged, so you put ze original in
a vault. Zis other one, however,' he said as he slapped the identical painting
irreverently, 'iz ze fake one and iz ze one you put on the wall for everyone to
see.'" (Pages 146-7)
After wrapping up the story of how the real
painting subsequently got damaged when he and his kids engaged in a game of
rubber band wars, the author frames his argument beautifully in making the
spiritual application:
"There have been times in my life when I've
tried to do good and it hasn't worked out the way I thought it would. I've
gotten into a lot of mischief and taken chances and even taken some big risks.
In the process, sometimes I've let people down or things I've done didn't go
well and I've taken a rubber band or two to the head. We all have. But after
the Puppeteer painting got shot, I realized that God doesn't think any less of
us when things don't go right. Actually, I think He plans it. What He doesn't
plan on is us putting a fake version of ourselves out there to take the hit.
God is the master artist and made an original version of us, a priceless one
that cost everything to create. A version that can't and won't be created
again.
He asks us to hang that version of ourselves for everyone to see. Despite our inherent beauty, each of us is tempted to hide the original so we won't get damaged. I understand why, I really do. And the fake version of us, it's not worthless. It's just worth less because it's only a copy of the real us, a version we don't care about as much. When we hang the fake version out there, it's not the version God created. In that sense, it's like an imposter, a poser, a stunt double is standing in for us and telling the world that this is the best we've got, or the best we'll risk. And when we put the cheap, fake version of ourselves out there, most of the time it probably comes across to God like a bad Elvis impersonation." (Pages 149-50)
He asks us to hang that version of ourselves for everyone to see. Despite our inherent beauty, each of us is tempted to hide the original so we won't get damaged. I understand why, I really do. And the fake version of us, it's not worthless. It's just worth less because it's only a copy of the real us, a version we don't care about as much. When we hang the fake version out there, it's not the version God created. In that sense, it's like an imposter, a poser, a stunt double is standing in for us and telling the world that this is the best we've got, or the best we'll risk. And when we put the cheap, fake version of ourselves out there, most of the time it probably comes across to God like a bad Elvis impersonation." (Pages 149-50)
I read and review a lot of books, most of them
quite good. Only about 1-2% do I label "must
read." Add this small
masterpiece to that category. Buy it, read it, act on it and pass it along. Read about a vibrant kind of love and then go
out and do some love.
Al
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