About Footnotes2Stories

As a blogger since 2009, I continue to write about story, emphasizing the one STORY that governs and supercedes all stories.

Yours, mine, and ours.

You and I need story the way cars need fuel and bodies need nourishment: to keep going till we are gone.

Where do you and I fit into this vast panorama of human history?

C.S. Lewis wrote:

“You don’t have a soul.

You are a soul.”

Therefore,

You don’t have a story.

You are a story.

You and I embody a story within the pages of God’s story, each one as unique as our fingerprints and DNA.

Why now? Each of our stories serve God’s good purposes, for as human beings, we are alive and actively involved in His story at this moment in time.

Make Sense of Your Story

In his book Secrets in the Dark, Frederick Buechner repeats these words like a refrain. “Pay attention to your life.”

Making sense of your story begins by paying attention. If you don’t pay attention to your life, why should anyone else?

You can live a better story when you pay attention to your life. Your story has meaning. Or else it doesn’t. The Bible seeks to direct you and me to the meaning of life, as you and I live it.

We each experience life in the one and only body God gave us. It’s only natural then to think I’m the main character in my story because I see myself in every scene.

Story provides a framework for context, setting, theme, while conflict gives each character obstacles to overcome, dreams to fulfill, and people to relate to.

Stories help us as human beings make sense of our lives.

If life is the best teacher, story is a vehicle for learning how to live your best life. Story provides a way to learn from all sorts of people’s lives. “Some are dead and some are living, In my life I’ve loved them all.”

Yes, I love stories––whether true or fiction created to carry truth––where people disguised as characters contribute to my understanding of life and help me see myself more clearly.

From Shakespeare to Sir Arthur Conan Doyle to Agatha Christie, to Joseph and King David and a host of biblical persons, their written and preserved stories enlarge my capacity to grow as a human being.

The Big Picture

Each and every person is part of a much bigger story, a story already in progress that began before you and I learned how to think or read or conceive of meaning and a purpose in life.

Characters in stories help us relate to other people’s challenges and help us learn from lessons they learned or failed to learn.

Without even thinking about it, you and I are wired to respond to stories.

Stories take readers and thinkers beyond the limitations of time and GPS location so that other people’s life experiences––their stories––serve as one of the easiest ways to learn how to live your best life.

Stories help people learn and remember.

Footnotes remind those who pay attention that there’s always more to the story.


God, who made the world and everything in it, since He is Lord of heaven and earth, does not dwell in temples made with hands. Nor is He worshiped with men’s hands, as though He needed anything, since He gives to all life, breath, and all things. And He has made from one blood every nation of men to dwell on all the face of the earth, and has determined their preappointed times and the boundaries of their dwellings, so that they should seek the Lord, in the hope that they might grope for Him and find Him, though He is not far from each one of us; . . .
— Acts 17:24–27, NKJV