February 22, 2020

Struggling with Our Disney Park Expectations


Does Disney Imagineering ever meet our expectations? Or do they routinely promise what they don't deliver? Either way, we Disney fans are quite the group! We rightfully expect top quality in the parks- especially at those prices which increase every year- and if we had our way, we'd get cutting edge, Asia park quality attractions every year. When they do deliver what they promise, it's usually spectacular.  See Rise of the Resistance at both coasts Star Wars: Galaxy's Edge or Pandora's amazing Flight of Passage at Disney's Animal Kingdom. But more often than not in the last decade or so, the American parks have been shortchanged. (Curious about the last decade or so and what they built? Check out this article.)

We are frustrated when we do not get what we want and when we get what we hate. Pixar Pier anyone? Whether it is cheap off-the-shelf attractions like those at California Adventure, recycled parades, or the endless character intrusion into attractions where they do not belong, it's a no win for everyone. We get rightfully angry at half-hearted commitment to quality when maintenance stinks or service falters at Walt Disney World, when buildings are left to rot at Disneyland or attractions open but can't operate at capacity when thousands of tourists come expertly to ride the latest and greatest. Where's the integrity in this?

But to be fair, let me turn the tables and say we are not the only ones who demand it all and yet do not deliver what we promise.

Avengers Campus looks to fall way short
of what it should be.

The challenge before me is to give my all. As a believer in Jesus Christ, I took from him the gift of eternal life through His sacrifice by promising I'd give up my life to gain His. And yet I find I compromise or forget about it at times. Don't you?


I'm telling you, Francis Chan's book Crazy Love, is knocking me on my rear and causing me to reevaluate what it means to be a Christ follower. Do I really live like I am giving it all up for God- or am I playing games with it. I can fool others, even myself, but not the Creator of the universe. Here's the clear scriptural challenge before me:


"If anyone would come after me, he must deny himself and take up his cross daily and follow me. For whoever wants to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for me will save it."


Jesus is calling us to a life of personal, daily sacrifice and devotion to Him and His purposes. He demands it all from those who call on his name and expect eternal life upon his return. This isn't philosophy here- this is relationship. Christianity is not a set of rules, and "believing" in Jesus is not the answer. Believing and obeying Jesus and living for Him daily shows our devotion to him, proving we are truly his followers. It is a high price and a high calling.


We are going to be so surprised to discover that giving God a small piece of our lives didn't do the trick. We think we can give him head knowledge but live and act as if He doesn't require more of us. He wants all of us not just the parts that we want to give him. Ouch! I fall short here- and I need his grace and forgiveness to keep going.


The great apostle Paul puts it in perspective: "In the same way, count yourselves dead to sin but alive to God in Christ Jesus. Therefore do not let sin reign in your mortal body do that you obey its evil desires. Do not offer the parts of your body to sin, as instruments of wickedness, but rather offer yourselves to God, as those who have been brought from death to life; and offer the parts of your body to him as instruments of righteousness". This means discipling ourselves in how we talk, what we do, and what we choose to think about. In other words, a radical change in our life as we now belong to Jesus and His purposes.


So, I ask those of you who claim to believe in Jesus, calling yourselves Christians- Where's the follow-through? Where's the integrity? Where's the passion? Lest you think I am harsh, these are the same questions God asks of all of us- the very ones I am asking myself these days.

(Concept art copyright The Walt Disney Comapny.)

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