CHRIST IN WINTER: The Irrelevant
Musings About Perfection by An Old Man Who Is Still Going On—
When I was still a young
preacher, I heard a basketball referee say that in his profession, you were
expected to start out perfect and then get better. I immediately applied that
to the ministry.
I should not have been surprised at the need for perfection as the minimal standard. I had learned as a child that perfection would save me from punishment but not gain me any praise. Perfection was the necessary minimum.
For instance, I learned to be quiet about pain. Never say “Ouch.” If I got hurt, my mother would hit me. Not for saying “Ouch,” but for getting hurt. It meant I did something wrong. If I had paid attention, I wouldn’t have gotten hurt. To this day, pain doesn’t make me hurt as much as it makes me angry, at myself: Durn, I messed up again.
Perfection as the minimum
standard was right in my wheelhouse, as a Methodist minister. After all,
it was the organizer of Methodism, John Wesley, the great theological exponent
of free will, who espoused the doctrine of Christian Perfection. Along with the
others in my ordination class, I answered Yes when asked, “Do you expect
to be made perfect in this life?” I’m sure that all of us crossed our fingers
behind our backs, and, more importantly, immediately began defining perfection
in various non-perfect ways.
When John Wesley declared
that perfection should be the goal of Methodists, it is usually added that he
meant perfection in love. No one can be perfect in intelligence or
athletic performance and such, even in kindness, but love is entirely
different. With love, you can start over at any time.
Gabrielle Zevin says that her book, Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow “…is about work. And it’s about love.” It certainly is, but it’s also about perfection. Because it’s about video games.
The book title, of course, comes from Macbeth’s famous soliloquy in his eponymous play by Shakespeare…
Tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow creeps in this petty pace from day to day. To the last syllable of recorded time; And all our yesterdays have lighted fools to dusty death. Out, out, brief candle! Life’s but a walking shadow, a poor player, that struts and frets his hour upon the stage and then is heard no more. It is a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing. [1]
Zevin is an excellent writer and story teller, but I’m sure I missed a lot of the nuances of the book because I haven’t played a video game since Pacman. Tomorrow3 is about young people who play and create video games. That involves work, and love, and the possibility of perfection.
There is no standard by which you can judge that a game is perfect when you are creating it. You can work and work and get it better, but how can you possibly know if ever does reach perfection?
Love and playing video games, though, you can start over at any time. You don’t even have to play to the end of the game. Any time you make a mistake, you can start over.
You have learned how to play better next time. You have moved closer to perfection. When you feel that life is a tale told by an idiot, signifying nothing, you can start over.
In Christian terms, starting over is called repentance. Its original meaning is simply to turn around and go the other way. If you have trouble with the others who are trying to create and play the game, you can start over at any time. That’s called forgiveness,
You don’t go on to perfection by being perfect. When you make a mistake playing the game, you just start over.
You don’t have to wait for tomorrow… or tomorrow… or tomorrow…
John Robert McFarland
1] My college roommate,
Tom Cone, once had a dog named Brief Candle, so that when necessary, he could
order the dog out of the house in Shakespearean terms: Out, out Brief
Candle!









