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You must put your head into the lion’s mouth if the performance is to be a success.
Winston Churchill
Eight years ago, my youngest son, Kellen, and I had the opportunity to attend a launch screening of Darkest Hour at Hillsdale College. The movie tells the story of Winston Churchill and the momentous events of his first four weeks as Prime Minister of Britain on the edge of World War II in May, 1940. The movie powerfully captures the magnitude of the events in this window of history and the complexity of the task before the newly appointed Prime Minister. For those of us poised at our own edges, it provides pointed lessons for bracing oneself in the face of destiny’s call.
Though few of us will ever be called to lead our nation through a moment of crisis, all of us lead lives marked by inflection points. Moments when, prepared or not, we are summoned to face a decision or reckoning that feels bigger than anything we have ever known. Our moments are unlikely to inspire the curiosity and scrutiny afforded the momentous events of Churchill’s life, but they may be equally dramatic and consequential for us and those in our lives. Our lives are imbued with unique purpose and a beautiful gift of our existence centers on living these moments to that purpose amid it’s place in the lives of those around us.
After the screening of the movie, we had the opportunity to observe a live panel discussion between Dr. Larry Arnn, President of Hillsdale College, Gary Oldman, who played Churchill in the movie, and Doug Urbanski, the Producer of the movie. When asked about the project, Oldman and Urbanski used the expression harmonic convergence to describe the unlikely chain of events leading to the development of movie. Isn’t that how our lives work? Plodding away on our daily routine, things wanted or unwanted appear and we are presented with a choice. Our lives reflect a series of harmonic convergences from which we launch into a particular direction and destiny is made. For my part, I don’t believe that harmonic convergences are accidental.
As we consider our own harmonic convergences, what lessons might we draw from Churchill and Darkest Hour?
Last night, we attended a wedding for the daughter of close friends of ours. Watching the couple and listening to the speeches, I was filled with the magnitude of the moment: a great edge as both culmination and point of departure. Looking at our grown children sitting around the table, moments of harmonic convergence flashed through my mind and I was swept away in a sea of images marking some destinations fulfilled and the arrivals yet to be.
What are the moments facing you now? As opportunities to rise or retreat from the occasion present themselves, what will you do? We are all called to leave our own dent in the universe – even if that universe is the block on which we live. The dramas of our days may not be written or recorded but play out quietly before a seemingly indifferent world. So what? Seize them as the moments they are and see your destiny as what it might be: the chance to make a difference. Then embrace that destiny with the resolve and effort worthy of something greater than yourself.
By Phillip Berry | Orient Yourself5
55 ratings
You must put your head into the lion’s mouth if the performance is to be a success.
Winston Churchill
Eight years ago, my youngest son, Kellen, and I had the opportunity to attend a launch screening of Darkest Hour at Hillsdale College. The movie tells the story of Winston Churchill and the momentous events of his first four weeks as Prime Minister of Britain on the edge of World War II in May, 1940. The movie powerfully captures the magnitude of the events in this window of history and the complexity of the task before the newly appointed Prime Minister. For those of us poised at our own edges, it provides pointed lessons for bracing oneself in the face of destiny’s call.
Though few of us will ever be called to lead our nation through a moment of crisis, all of us lead lives marked by inflection points. Moments when, prepared or not, we are summoned to face a decision or reckoning that feels bigger than anything we have ever known. Our moments are unlikely to inspire the curiosity and scrutiny afforded the momentous events of Churchill’s life, but they may be equally dramatic and consequential for us and those in our lives. Our lives are imbued with unique purpose and a beautiful gift of our existence centers on living these moments to that purpose amid it’s place in the lives of those around us.
After the screening of the movie, we had the opportunity to observe a live panel discussion between Dr. Larry Arnn, President of Hillsdale College, Gary Oldman, who played Churchill in the movie, and Doug Urbanski, the Producer of the movie. When asked about the project, Oldman and Urbanski used the expression harmonic convergence to describe the unlikely chain of events leading to the development of movie. Isn’t that how our lives work? Plodding away on our daily routine, things wanted or unwanted appear and we are presented with a choice. Our lives reflect a series of harmonic convergences from which we launch into a particular direction and destiny is made. For my part, I don’t believe that harmonic convergences are accidental.
As we consider our own harmonic convergences, what lessons might we draw from Churchill and Darkest Hour?
Last night, we attended a wedding for the daughter of close friends of ours. Watching the couple and listening to the speeches, I was filled with the magnitude of the moment: a great edge as both culmination and point of departure. Looking at our grown children sitting around the table, moments of harmonic convergence flashed through my mind and I was swept away in a sea of images marking some destinations fulfilled and the arrivals yet to be.
What are the moments facing you now? As opportunities to rise or retreat from the occasion present themselves, what will you do? We are all called to leave our own dent in the universe – even if that universe is the block on which we live. The dramas of our days may not be written or recorded but play out quietly before a seemingly indifferent world. So what? Seize them as the moments they are and see your destiny as what it might be: the chance to make a difference. Then embrace that destiny with the resolve and effort worthy of something greater than yourself.