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In urban design and landscape engineering, planners have to contend with a well-known aspect of human nature: people tend to go where they want and how they want. This leads to a phenomenon known as a “desire path,” where people remake the landscape by walking over it. So what should designers do? Plan a careful route, or accommodate people’s desires? The same tension holds true in Christian faith: we tend to orient our lives around what we want. If the Psalmist is correct, God desires to give us what we want—but only as we learn to recognize the God-centered nature of all desire.
By Forest Hills Mennonite ChurchIn urban design and landscape engineering, planners have to contend with a well-known aspect of human nature: people tend to go where they want and how they want. This leads to a phenomenon known as a “desire path,” where people remake the landscape by walking over it. So what should designers do? Plan a careful route, or accommodate people’s desires? The same tension holds true in Christian faith: we tend to orient our lives around what we want. If the Psalmist is correct, God desires to give us what we want—but only as we learn to recognize the God-centered nature of all desire.