Friday, September 30, 2011
DEVOTION: Where Is My Focus? - Shirley Corder
God looked over everything he had made; it was so good, so very good! It was evening, it was morning; Day 6.
(Genesis 1:31 MSG)
I recently joined a newly formed camera club. At the second meeting, the lecturer taught us some techniques concerning our choice of subjects. He projected various photographs onto the wall, and explained what made them great pictures, or where their weaknesses lay. Each time, he emphasized the need for a focal point. There was no such thing as just a beautiful view. There was always a main focus, perhaps a beautiful rose, a sunset, or a ship.
He showed us a picture of a beautiful garden. Flowering shrubs and shaped hedges surrounded manicured lawns. Overhead, the sky was an azure blue with wisps of soft white cloud—a stunning photograph. High up in the sky, an eagle hovered.
"Where is the focus of this picture?" he asked us. Obviously, the photographer had intended to take a photo of the beautiful gardens. It is likely that he spotted the eagle and planned to include him in the picture. "Notice something interesting," the speaker continued. "See how your eyes are drawn to the eagle. You look at the gardens. Then you glance back at the bird." He explained how any animal or bird in a picture always dominates the picture, no matter how small it may be.
He showed us further examples. Sure enough, it happened every time. Our eyes were drawn toward any animal or bird in the picture.
A thick forest stood on a carpet of wild flowers. Nestled on a branch of a gnarled old tree, lay a nest of twigs with three little heads peering over the top. The nest was tiny, the baby birds even tinier. Yet they became the focus of the photograph.
"Now look at this," he continued. He put up a photograph showing two majestic mountains, one on the right and the other on the left. High in the brilliant blue African sky an eagle or vulture hovered, too small to identify. But the bird wasn't the focus. Where the mountains came together to form a V, a young woman stood, arms stretched upwards. She was small, but immediately we all reacted. "The woman is the focus."
The lecturer smiled, then explained that where life, as in animals or birds, dominate a photograph, when a human being appears, he or she is always the main focus of the picture.
This fascinated me, both as a Christian and as a writer.
When God created the world, he created a magnificent backdrop of mountains, seas, deserts, waterfalls, sandy beaches, mighty rivers and dramatic jungles. And He said "They're good!" Then He created us—men and women—and He said, "They're very good!" Suddenly mankind was the focus of God's entire picture of creation.
When God looks at the world, He doesn't focus on the mountain, the seas, or the other splendours. He focuses on mankind. He looks at you, and he looks at me. Does He smile and say, "This is very good"? Do I make my creator proud?
For me as a writer, this reminds me of the importance of building realistic characters. No matter how good my plot or background may be, it's the characters that make the story. It's the people with whom the readers identify.
I write mainly non-fiction, especially of a devotional nature. If my writing is only about worldly or theological issues, I'm not likely to reach my reader. I need to write about real people, address my writing to real people, encourage and inspire real people. Why? Because they are the focal point of God's creation.
Prayer: Lord God, it astounds me that with all the beauty and magnificence of your creation around, your real focus is on me. Help me to bring honour to your Name, that when people look at me they may say, "God is good—He's very good."
Shirley M. Corder lives on the coast of South Africa, surrounded by the beauties of God's creation. Please pay a visit to her personal website, where her goal is to encourage and inspire other writers, or Rise and Soar, her site to encourage and inspire those in the cancer valley. Link up with her on Twitter and FaceBook.
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Thanks Shirley,
ReplyDeleteThat was very encouraging.
Jennifer Ann
Thank you Shirl for your Devotion "Where's my Focus?" -------- so well put!
ReplyDeleteNaureen
You got straight to the point. How interesting that God's focus is upon us -- and our focus needs always to be upon God first. Then everything else falls into line.
ReplyDelete"Turn your eyes upon Jesus..."
Great post, Shirley. And now I'm wondering what my "focus" is-or should be-in this current "work in progress" I should be writing. Real characters in real situations readers will focus on may be easy to say here that's what I should be doing. Of course, as in photography putting it into practice is another thing!
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