“We do not believe in ourselves until someone reveals that deep inside
us is valuable, worth listening to, worthy of our trust, sacred to our touch.
Once we believe in ourselves we can risk curiosity, wonder, spontaneous delight
or any experience that reveals the human spirit.” – e.e. Cummings
Many of us walking the streets of society today have a variety of
fervent opinions about a great number of things in our world. In the recent
elections we saw a great division over purpose and ideal in what people believe
in our land. Democracy, in its base form, is about assertion of beliefs.
Presenting passions to the whole and voting for the people’s subjugation to the
rule. Sometimes it comes with praise, excitement and joy, and sometimes it
comes with regret, anger and discontentment.
With the ever-changing events in the world, a social morality has been
put on the forefront of focus; restoring value to the human condition, enlisting
new passions to motivate others and pursuing the advancement of mutual good.
This new enlightenment of perspective takes the tenets of self-realization and
projects them into the experiential truth of the society. To use Cummings’ idea, the Postmodern society
has instilled in us a revelation: Believe in yourself, it is through this power
that you will inspire the world, contribute to its betterment and transcend the
insignificance of details for the experience of connectivity through
commonality, with your other passengers on the Good Ship Earth.
From politics and religion, to coffee and craft beer; from green
living and consumerism, to social media narcissism and celebrity fixation; and
from identity and exclusivity, to brand association and indie appeal – Our
society calls us to balance a system of beliefs shared by all with freedom from
beliefs which are inconvenient to your desires. This revelation of self, calls
us to heighten the importance of our opinions about ourselves, broadcast our
opinions about others and dismiss and denigrate any truth which escapes our
experience, lives beyond our understanding and validates the principles
contrary to what we want.
As a result, the only ability we have to assert our influence is
internal. The only place we can rest our hope is in the busyness of our hands,
the fulfillment of our pleasures and the connectivity to others who are equally
internally influential. This philosophy has spawned books like The Secret, A
Course on Miracles and Dianetics. It brings to life an emerging church of
influence which substitutes truth for charisma, obedience for understanding and
wisdom for relevance.
And yet, in the end, this Postmodern social morality does not provide
significance or transcendence; it brings a busyness to our achievements and a zeal
to our au fait advancement of self. The
treadmill of the contemporary focuses our hearts on perspectives gleaned from
our desire rather than what we truly need. As we run through our days, we are
blinded by all that we are and all that we are doing, losing the heart of true
connection for a assemblage of association.
In looking to that end, people are going to be self-absorbed,
money-hungry, self-promoting, stuck-up, profane, disobedient, crude, coarse,
dog-eat-dog, unbending, slanderers, impulsively wild, savage, cynical,
treacherous, ruthless, opinionated, addicted to lust, and allergic to God.
They’ll take up with every new fad that calls itself “truth.” They get
exploited every time and never really learn.
Jesus spoke to this in the scriptures in likening the truth to a great
celebration feast given by a king:
He sent his servants to those who had been invited to the banquet to
tell them to come, but they refused to come. Then he sent some more servants
and said, ‘Tell those who have been invited that I have prepared my dinner: the
best food you have ever had, 5 star cuisines, and everything is ready. Come to
the celebration!’
But they dismissed the offer, busy with their work, focused on their desires
and concerned with their own ideas about how to feed themselves and provide
their need. Some of them stayed at home, some of them plunged back into work
and some stood up against the servants speaking about the celebration. Many
servants were mistreated, ostracized and even killed. The king was enraged. He
sent calamity upon them for their rejection.
For many of us on this earth, we try to construct the truth as we see
fit. We go forward in an existence that builds a foundation upon itself. Though
the ideas in society may carry popular sway, they do not deter the truth as it
is, objectively outside of our perspective.
Jesus Christ presented the truth, as it is, the truth about who He is
and the truth about who we are almost 2000 years ago. The foundation for what we know, built on
anything but that truth leads to discouragement, disconnection and ultimate
boredom. He did not call us to look to our own insight, but to his. In this
world where contemporary and relevant pursuits earmark validity and purpose, He
calls us to stop the searching and know Him in the stillness of who He is.
It is difficult for many people to let go the entitlement of “how they
think it should be.” They experience a life in opposition to the truth, not
because they know it and despise it, but because they want to be the provider
of it, the discoverer of it and the best assessor of it. They get caught up in
crafting the right thing to do, being the great force of right/good or being
busy in promoting the progress that needs to be embraced. It is only in looking
to the end where there will be found that the battle was not in circumstance or
ideal, but in the effort to provide truth by one’s own strength.
Those who would “deserve” the celebration by finding the truth for
themselves and cannot accept the king’s provision, only find that the wedge
between what they could receive freely from the king and that which they must
provide for themselves, is made of their own strength. In their own strength
they climb back on the treadmill and work toward their own provision, providing
contemporary and relevant insight into why their new perspective is the only
reasonable way to know the truth.
And yet this is still the place where the love of Jesus, which allows
mankind the freedom to choose their own strength over his, goes to the street
corners and invites to the feast anyone his servants find. Gathering as many
who will lay down their strength, get off the treadmill of self-provision and
receive what He has graciously provided. Many get invited, but only a few will
let go their personal view of truth for the truth as it is.
The objectivity of truth is only in the person of Jesus Christ. It is
not in our belief in ourselves, our country, our party, our perspective that
provides our security; it is only our belief in Jesus that can provide that
which transcends our human limitation. He is the King, providing the ability
for us to abandon our efforts to manufacture purpose, peace, fulfillment and
perspective, and join the celebration that knows his provision for all things. It
is not in our realization of our own value that leads to the truth, but the
realization of his value, his Lordship and his mission for us that we find
salvation from a world losing itself to its own end.
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