Do you want to live in an imaginary world?

Opinion


model-railway 750pb
Do you want to live in an imaginary world?

Rev Nigel Lacey has been working on a model railway, but reminds us of the stark contrast between a train set and the real world

One of the things that I enjoy is making model railways. Whether it be making engines, rolling stock, or a layout, it is something that engages my mind and helps me to learn lots of skills – wiring, woodwork, metalwork, and so on
 
Over the last few weeks I have been steadily making some model buildings. A church, a shop, a station building, and some houses. This has been absorbing and fascinating at the same time. Currently I am making a village school which has brought memories of my own primary school days
 
I am not making a model of anywhere in particular. It is an imaginary ‘might have been’ if history had taken a slightly different course from what actually happened. I have found myself drawn into this imaginary history and can picture the sort of people who might have lived in the houses, shopped at the corner shop and been a pupil at the school. I can also imagine what the railway might have needed to carry in and out of such a community
 
Perhaps it is an escapism thing. I suppose it is a way of creating an ideal world that contrasts with how things really are
 
The real world is not neat and tidy, and it is not always summer, and people don’t generally lean over fences and gates to watch a small steam train puff gently through the countryside. The real world is often messy and dirty. There are injustices. There is suffering and there are dark days and struggles. Perhaps that is why my imaginary world is so compelling, but I know, deep down, that it is not a world that I can inhabit, even if I could shrink down to 1:76 scale!
 
You see, I have to live in the real world and interact with real flesh and blood people who hurt and grieve as well as experience joy and love. That is where the Christian faith comes into play. The belief that God came down to our real world as a human person is the unique claim of Christianity. It means that Christ’s followers can’t retreat into an imaginary world where all is perfect but have to be a part of the world that is real, with all that means. The real world is better than my imaginary one as it is where Christ actually is
 

The image is by Sharon Ang on Pixabay

nigel lacey 500


Rev Nigel Lacey is Rector of Hopton, Corton, and Gunton

 
 
 

The views carried here are those of the author, not of Network Norwich and Norfolk, and are intended to stimulate constructive debate between website users. 

We welcome your thoughts and comments, posted below, upon the ideas expressed here. 

Click here to read our forum and comment posting guidelines