The tapestry metaphor provides the knotty tangles of life and rich complexity for the sake of a coherent story.
We look at life from the back side of the tapestry.
We don't accomplish anything in this world alone, and whatever happens is the result of the whole tapestry of one's life, and all the weavings of individual threads form one another that create something.
Culture is the beautiful tapestry that weaves together the fabric of our society. It encompasses the beliefs, customs, traditions, and art forms that define a particular group of people. In an increasingly interconnected world, the significance of cultural diversity cannot be overstated.
Wholly linen tapestries were made in ancient Egypt, while Copts, or Egyptian Christians, and medieval Europeans sometimes used linen for the warp. Cotton and wool were employed for pre-Columbian Peruvian tapestries as well as for some of the tapestries made in the Islamic world during the Middle Ages.
Tapestries continued to be popular throughout European history, with notable examples such as Raphael's cartoons (c. 1515–1516), Rubens' Triumph of the Eucharist, and Charles Le Brun's series of the History of France (1663–1683).
Since the times of Ancient Rome, images of the Christian faith, including cherubs and angels, have been painted on fresco walls in Europe in the 13th century as decor. This evolved into wall tapestries that were used to depict important biblical events and stories.
God is weaving His tapestry according to a specific plan for a specific purpose: to tell the story of His love and glory across time. His promises are the unbreakable threads stretching across time from creation to eternity; into and around these are woven the colorful fibers spun from every tribe, tongue, and nation.
The Psalmist weaves a beautiful tapestry of God and Creation, of land and earth and sky and sea. He weaves in a vision of all the works of creation for all of God's children to see, and finally the strand of human creativity and partnership with God in the creation and building of God's kingdom.