Faith Works 5-4-19
Jeff Gill
Who is everyone, anyhow?
___
You may have heard that EVERYONE is going to watch "Avengers:  Endgame."
But are they? Everyone? 
I made a reference at church, on a Wednesday night at Bible  study, to the Marvel Cinematic Universe, in an aside about Doctor Strange, then  asked how many had seen a Marvel movie — 1 hand out of 50 in the room went up,  so add me in for 2, or 4%. The same for having seen any Harry Potter movie in a  theater (or on TV).
When I went to look it up, the Harry Potter movies were seen  on big screens by 8 to 14% of the country (and that's not factoring for repeat  viewings by devoted fans). Around 1 in 10. That means close to 9 of 10 have  never seen any of them. Not everyone!
  On TV, "everyone" is even smaller. 4% watched "The Sopranos" series  finale, 3% the end of "Breaking Bad", and not quite 1% "Mad Men." Going back a  bit, 24% of the country watched the conclusion of "Friends," 30% the Seinfeld  finale (nearly all of us regretted having watched it, IMHO), 35% the 2010 Super  Bowl between the Saints and Colts, 38% the 2015 Super Bowl between the Patriots  and the Seahawks. 
But 40% of the nation watched the conclusion of "The  Fugitive" in 1967, and 45% of Americans tuned into the finale of "M*A*S*H" in  1983. I may not have this exactly right, and they claim higher ratings for a  few Super Bowls over the "M*A*S*H" goodbye, but I'm just looking at the  audience and dividing by the US population for that year.
Meanwhile, back to the movies… 
  14% of the nation went to see "Iron Man" when it first came out in 2008; 23%  watched "Black Panther" last year; a little less than that "Avengers: Infinity  War." "Star Wars" captured about a third of the nation in its first few years,  the more recent installments closer to 20% even with Mark Hamill back onscreen.  At the most optimistic, the everyone who will go see "Endgame" in a theater is  probably a third at best, I'd say less than 30% or so given the number who  watch it again and again. 
  How many is everyone, anyhow?
If this makes some of you feel a little less out of the  loop, then I'm glad. I have seen most of the above, but I'd not say any or most  of them are life essential experiences. And many of you have figured out that  by paying attention and using a little everyday reasoning you can figure out  enough about what people are talking about if it comes up in conversation.
Except for "Game of Thrones," which I've not seen a minute  of. Another "everyone" experience, which in this case I've missed out on.
You hear these news stories about what everyone is doing, or  that we all should be worried about. Coffee, cholesterol, fiber in your diet,  bacteria on your doorknobs. You wonder if you're missing out on microgreens or  aromatherapy or hot yoga, because "everyone is into them." Everyone?
Here's what keeps me writing this column, friends. And in  ministry, too, for that matter. You know what everyone will experience?
Suffering. 100%. Pain and sorrow. Sorry, 100%. Some more  than others, yes, but we all encounter them, rich or poor, young or old. The  flavors and shadings change, but the essences: we all experience them, every  last one of us.
And . . . yes, I'm going there. Death. For ourselves, and  unless you die so young you're not reading this anyhow, for others. That is an  everyone experience. It is part of life, and living. Death is. 100%.
Which is why stories of faith and hope and doubt and  questing after a sense of meaning and purpose beyond the immediate moment have  such appeal. Including in many of those not-everyone "everyone" media  experiences mentioned above. No spoiler alert needed, but many of them involve  confronting death, and whether it obliterates meaning, or if there's something  that endures.
If I had a story to tell that answers that question for us,  in our own real, non-CGI augmented lives, I don't think anyone would cover  their ears and shout "no spoilers, please!" There's a story to tell, and there  are our stories of encountering that Good News as it erupts and breaks into  this life, about what's eternal, everlasting, and enduring. 
One that doesn't end with Easter day.
Jeff Gill is a writer, storyteller, and pastor in Licking  County; yes, he watched "The Fugitive," too. With David Janssen, not Harrison  Ford. Tell him your piece of everyone's story at knapsack77@gmail.com, or follow  @Knapsack on Twitter.

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