The Way: A 3-Day Devotional With Crosscut Collectiveنموونە
For the first 19 years of my life, I grew up in my home city of Dundee, in Scotland. The name is derived from two Celtic words: dun, meaning fort, and de, meaning fire – fort fire, which is fitting given that the dominant natural landmark is Dundee Law, an extinct volcano right in the center of the city. From the top, you can see every part of the city and beyond; from the River Tay as it empties itself into the Firth of Tay Estuary to Belmont Lighthouse, whose light can be seen at night guiding ships as it brightens up the sky just beyond the horizon.
Despite being burnt to the ground in 1548 and then completely destroyed in 1651, my home city is rich in history and rich in its reach across the planet. In 1797, Dundee-born Adam Duncan led a battle against the Dutch, which was considered the greatest ever Royal Navy victory at that time. Captain Scott sailed the RSS Discovery in record-breaking expeditions to the Antarctic. Mary Slessor, inspired by David Livingston, the famous Scottish missionary who saw missionary work in Africa as the means to spreading the gospel and ending the East African Arab-Swahili slave trade, helped spread the gospel throughout West Africa, saving children from death and helping the sick.
I can say that I am proud to be Dundonian. Proud to be Scottish, in fact. But I am conscious of how much I have idealized my own nationality. The Massacre of Glencoe takes on a romantic feel in popular culture, when in fact, it was anything but that. The truth is, we are raised on and influenced by the stories we tell about ourselves and about where we come from: our national heroes, our national exports, our national triumphs, our national achievements. We say less about our national villains, national injustices, national exploitation, and national conquests. Today, out of 195 nations that exist, all of them are facing disease and pandemic. Sixty-nine countries are actively involved in a war. Twenty percent of the world’s population faces extreme hunger, including 30% of children under 5 who face acute malnutrition. If we go back in time, the impact of our continual carving up of the earth becomes unfathomable, incalculable even.
But there is a problem. The earth isn’t ours. It’s true; God did tell us to work it, keep it (Gen 2:15), call it, and name it (Gen 2: 19-20), but He did not pass ownership of it. As Romans 11:36 states, “For from him and through him and to him are all things.” Psalm 24:1-2 puts it this way, “The earth is the Lord’s and the fullness thereof, the world and those who dwell therein, for he has founded it upon the seas and established it upon the rivers.”
I’m not sure we have done a good job on the whole “working it” and “keeping it” front. Humanity has relentlessly and continually declared independence from God — from the fall, divisions, and war to pride, greed, and selfishness — rejecting His many attempts to reach out to us with love and forgiveness. His ultimate expression was Jesus, who came to earth to show us the way and reveal to us the Kingdom of God here on earth: breaking through, breaking down, breaking out. Our response? Crucifixion. His response? Resurrection. Our response? Look around.
How do we make sense of it all?
In late Autumn of 2019, I remember coming back from Geneva. I had landed at Manchester Airport on a Sunday evening, and it was dark, cold, and lonesome. As I was driving through Bradford, I suddenly had this sense of a melody along with these words: “The earth will know your name, the whisper of your voice, creation will again give praise. The continents in drift, the nations every change, but your glory and your power remain… the earth is yours.” Then, in Spring 2020, through a chance meeting, two others from Nashville contributed melody and lyrics: “You restore, you give hope, you came to earth, you are life, you are love, you set us free” (even in songwriting, the body of Christ works together better than any single constituent member).
To answer the question, we make sense of it all by remembering that the earth is God’s. Always has been, always will be. He created it. He also knew what we would make of it. Yet, He reached out to us through Jesus and made a way — a change in citizenship according to Philippians 3:20, belonging to a holy nation according to 1 Peter 2:9 — if we accept Jesus as our way, our truth, and our life (John 14:6). Salvation, restoration, and eternity. No longer lost, but found. No longer Scottish…
That’s what I love about songs. As a means of communication and expression, they have an ability to bring together truths in such a way that it stirs us up and reminds us who we are and what our mission is. Our song, “The Earth Is Yours,” speaks to the truth of creation and the mission of salvation. It’s both a declaration and a call to prayer, a testimony, and a commission.
As we look around the world today and see endless tragedy, there is only one answer. John 8:32 says, “you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.” We have that answer. We have the truth, and we have an audience that needs to hear it, as the opening line of the song states, “The earth will know your name, the whisper of your voice….”
Scripture
About this Plan
Crosscut Collective is a collaborative music project among Christian songwriters and musicians from around the world. We’re a ministry dedicated to supporting independent artists in telling more stories and testimonies through music. Join us as we walk through three of the songs featured on our new album, "The Way." We hope to provide encouragement and give you an inside look at the stories and Biblical inspirations behind each song.
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