Faith Works 9-15-18
Jeff Gill
The God's-eye view not always the best
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It may seem like an odd thing to worry about, but I have  some questions about the sudden necessity for every news story on television,  each commercial, and now many website launch pages, to include drone footage.
Drone footage is cool. I don't question that, don't have a  problem with drones, don't dislike seeing it come up at all. But the pervasive  and even essential place a drone camera overview has taken makes me ask some  questions.
When you watch a camera angle rise up, it's like flying. And  we've all had those flying dreams, haven't we? It's a common human aspiration,  and the first time any of us were in a plane and watched the ground drop away  beneath the wings is a memorable moment. Any hiker let alone climber wants to  have that view from the top, the walk to the summit, and if you get to see a  sunrise from there, all the better.
You'll note that most mountaintop experiences don't  encompass watching the still glorious drama of a sunSET from a peak, because if  this was really a long trek to the top, if you watch the beauty of dusk from  the summit and see the last flicker of sun sink below the western horizon, that  means you will be making your way down in the dark.
Which is often not a good idea. Cliff edges, rocky slopes,  uneven footing. Sunrise from the heights is better than sunset, unless you're  camped out there – and you don't usually want to pitch a tent on a summit,  anyhow.
Drone footage has no such hazards, sunrise, sunset, above at  high noon or cruising through the day. But there is still something a bit  unnatural about it. To see the pinnacle of the courthouse in drone footage is  to experience something that previously only pigeons could have . . . or  Someone equally elevated.
Now, the "God's-eye view" is the basic expectation when you  are being shown a visual, from crime scenes to tourism. It's useful at times,  no doubt about it. You see what you might otherwise miss, and can get a sense  of the big picture.
But you don't experience it the same way. You have to be  able to toggle back and forth between the overview and the human view, like a  hiker with a map, a driver looking at their GPS device, and from those tools to  the road as it actually unrolls in front of you. I don't dislike maps or GPS  systems, I just know you can't always trust them to actually show a real person  how to navigate step by step by step. And if you immerse yourself too much in  the view from above, you can run into a perfectly obvious obstacle in the here-and-now.
Today, Saturday Sept. 15, I'm leading a walk around some of  Newark's streets starting and ending at the Great Circle Museum of the Newark  Earthworks, off Rt. 79 in Heath. This is part of the Ohio Open Doors program  from the Ohio History Connection that's statewide, and all this past week and  coming weekend. Sites that OHC manages and local history locations of all sorts  are all taking advantage of a lovely fall weekend (okay, but soon) to invite  people to visit places with a story to tell. My group will cover about two and  a half miles, take three hours or so, and will look at some "hidden in plain  sight" pieces of what was once four square miles and more of interconnected  geometric earthworks built on these river terraces some 2,000 years ago.
We'll have maps, of course, because that's how we're used to  navigating. They give us the "God's-eye view" of the whole, but the point of  the walk is to see from ground level, as the Builders did, what they were doing  on the land, and connecting horizontally places on the landscape, a sort of  script Ohio of the mind that you have to see from their angle.
And the Ohio Open Doors continues, and I get to help, with a  re-dedication ceremony on Sunday at 1:00 pm at our historic Courthouse in  Newark, and tours of some buildings downtown both old and new. The view from  above is dramatic, but the people become like ants on a sidewalk. The view from  among the crowd, the human perspective, is where I believe you can also get a  taste of inspiration about what has been built here in Licking County, and even  a better view of where we're going.
Jeff Gill is a writer, storyteller, and pastor in Licking  County; he's going to be helping with the Octagon Open House on October 7, too.  Tell him about your view from eye level of what God is up to in our area at knapsack77@gmail.com, or follow  @Knapsack on Twitter.
 
 


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