AI OVERVIEW: Taste and see that the Lord is good, and recognize that taste is a gift we give others and is formed by what we encounter and how we respond to it. Anthony Bourdain’s oyster episode, C.S. Lewis’s The Weight of Glory, and Chesterton’s reflections illustrate that taste reveals a larger, more alive world, and that taste is caught rather than taught. As tastemakers, especially for children and students, people shape discernment about what is good, beautiful, and true; the teaching invites reflection on who formed one’s own tastes and warns against living like zombies, urging gratitude and lively engagement with God’s gifts.
YOUTUBE DESCRIPTION: What if one of the greatest gifts you could give someone is helping them develop a taste for what is good? In this reflection on Psalm 34, John Ortberg revisits the famous invitation: "Taste and see that the Lord is good." But this time he explores a surprising idea: every one of...