Thursday, June 25, 2015

The Weakness of Humanity


  1. Humans are physically weak
God specifically made humanity physically weak, at least compared to the spirit world.  In the Bible, “spirit” doesn’t mean ethereal, but supernaturally strong.  An angel is some kind of superman who can turn invisible and transport to another place instantly.  Humans, individually, are weak—easy to kill, quick to get sick, weak when young and weak when old.  Humanity is just a weak species.  Which is why it is amazing what humanity has done.  They have created mountains out of steel and glass.  They have changed the surface of the world in ways only God has done.  Individually, humans are weak, but collectively, humanity is a god—creative and powerful.  For this reason the God says, “Nothing which they purpose to do will be impossible to them,” and then He limits human capacity for community (Genesis 11:6-7).  Humans are made to be weak so that only through God’s strength can they accomplish great things.

  1. Humans are mentally weak
The human brain is an amazingly adaptive creation.  If a person is blind, the brain takes the cells used for sight and uses them for other tasks, strengthening other senses.  However, our minds are somewhat too adaptive, able to adapt to imaginary structures, thus becoming maladaptive to real situations.  It requires a strong mind to respond appropriately to the unbelievably complex physical, social, and intellectual environment we find ourselves in.  Society is more complex than ever—and our brains adapt, somewhat.  But more often than not, our minds confuse reality with a lie, confuse what is with what we’ve been told, confuse our thinking with what is real.  More and more people are mentally and socially incapable of functioning in our society.  But even the functional will make grave mental mistakes. We trust that which we ought not and distrust that which we can rely on.  And in the simplest of tasks, we find ourselves in error. 

  1. Humans are self-oriented
In the womb, every human being is alone.  For nine months, there is no one else in the universe.  Then we are born and we have the stark reality of others thrust upon us as a stark reality.  However, in our minds, the Other does not exist.  There is simply those who provide for our needs.  Eventually, we recognize other human beings who might even be equal to us.  But the habit of thinking of ourselves as the only individual in the universe is hard to break.  Perhaps in general we see others as equal to ourselves, at least philosophically, but when it comes down to it, when stressed or in severe crisis, we take care of ourselves first, or only. 

            This does not mean that humans cannot be altruistic.  They can, although it is rare, and requires a severe form of discipline.  But the same firefighter who was willing to sacrifice himself for a victim of a fire might also beat his wife.  The philanthropist could ignore her children for her work, and then excuse her wrong as “necessity.”  In the end, we put energy into that which we feel compelled to focus on, not because it is right or because it helps the most people, but because we have some innate drive to do so. 
Humans wear strange clothes

            It is fascinating to hear people talk about “love”, meaning erotic or romantic attachment.  This love more than any other is driven by inner need, yet it is spoken of at times as altruistic, as focus on the Other.  Another person is involved in erotic love almost by default, but erotic love does not in any way necessitate the benefit of the other.  Rather, erotic love is driven exclusively by inner desire, and when that desire acts in opposition to the other’s need, then the other is sacrificed on the altar of Love.  Romeo and Juliet were perfect examples of the inner selfish drive ignoring the needs of the Other.  Yes, they loved the object of their desire, but ignored the needs of everyone else and allowed their families to be destroyed for the sake of their desire.

            Another kind of love is often confused with selflessness, which is parental love.  Again, this is a love that is based on an inner drive, not necessarily focused on the needs of the other.  We can see this in the abuses of parental love.  How often does fatherly love—the love of provision and discipline—turn into the narrow-focused selfishness of a workaholic or an abuser?  And motherly love—the love of empathy and benevolence—can easily turn into co-dependence or depression, if the love is driven by inner need instead of the need of the other. 

All too often do we call our selfishness “love” and then excuse all the wrongs we do because they were done out of “love”.   “Love” is only a benefit when it is done out of knowledge and true concern for the Other, not due to single-minded adherence to our inner drives.

It's all about the meat
  1. Humans are survival-oriented
Human beings are wired to be survivalists.  This doesn’t mean that we can necessarily be dropped in the middle of any wilderness and figure out how to live in harsh conditions.  I know that I would die, and quickly, if stuck in that kind of a situation.  Rather, we are wired to focus on the things that pertain to our own needs, and to help us attain those needs.

            I am not just talking about food, clothing and shelter, although this is part of it.  But most of us live in a society in which these foundational needs are provided for, even to those who are unable to obtain them on their own.  Once the basic survival needs are taken care of, then we focus on other aspects of survival.  We focus on security, so we are protected from harm, whether that be from wild dogs or from the threat of terrorists.  We focus on social connection, because we know that there is strength in numbers.  We focus on inner peace, because we know that excessive stress can kill us (or others if we tend to be an angry type). 

            And there is nothing wrong with trying to survive in these ways.  The problem is, even when we have our needs met in these areas, we tend to do more than our survival necessitates, and when we overcompensate, our ability to survive actually goes down, not up.  Our need for security easily becomes anxiety, which causes excessive stress and we tend to overreact to others—causing destruction to both ourselves and others.  We can eat to survive, or we can eat to self-medicate our mental instabilities which causes us physical problems.  We can work to maintain enough money to live on, but if money becomes a matter of societal honor, we can horde money for ourselves—money we don’t need or use—until we become dependent on an obscenely high salary, and that becomes our level for survival.  And society can become obese as well until they make it a legal necessity for others to live according to their high level of normalcy, where they end up punishing those who do not live with electricity or a certain kind of housing. 

            Because of our tendency to focus on survival, humans tend to over-survive.  We see certain levels of lifestyles as the “basics”, but we very much overcompensate for what we actually need.  Paul said, “With food and clothing we shall be content”, yet try to find a single follower of Paul who agrees with this statement.

  1. Humans are oppressed
If we take as a basic definition of freedom “the ability to do what is right without punishment”, then there is not a single human being that is free.  

We are controlled by our fears, which force us to do actions to alleviate that fear.  We fear losing our jobs, which give us the money to live our lifestyles, so we do whatever the jobs necessitate, even if we know it’s wrong.  We fear confrontation, so we stay away from relationships that would cause us to grow to avoid that which we find unpleasing.  We fear those who are unlike ourselves, so we avoid all those who are in greater need than ourselves, and make up stories about why we shouldn’t connect to them.  We fear punishment from the government, so we keep ourselves from doing good things that would get us punished.  We fear being shamed, so we try to fit into our society, even when our society is wrong.  We fear death and pain, so we don’t do the good things that cause these things.  And because we do not want to face our fears, we make excuses for why following our fears is the right thing to do.

            But we do not live by our fears absolutely—we not mice, scurrying away from every hint of monsters.  We also have drives.  We are driven by our addictions—that which we know harms us but makes us feel better or normal.  We are not afraid of our addictions, but we know that they should be feared.  They are too close to who we are to allow us to be fearful.  We are driven by our pleasures—our need for excitement or relaxation or to forget our normal life.  We are driven by need for family and community, and we will face our fears of meeting the opposite sex, of having a baby, of going to a new meeting full of strangers, just so that we can find or create that community that meets our drive. 

            But we are forced to do these things, either by ourselves, or by others.  Some of these things are good, some are not.  But the ethics or spirituality of the situation is almost never what drives us.  Rather we are like magnets, either pulled toward or driven away by this or that force.  We may claim independence, but rarely do we make a decision based on our own free will, on what is good.  We are led by others, by the context we live in.  This is oppression.  We are not free.

"I wear my sunglasses at night... so what?"
  1. Humans focus on the wrong solutions
We recognize our oppressions, our tendency to over-compensate, and the fact that we tend to do things that are not helpful to ourselves or others.  And so we try to find solutions.  “If only I lived somewhere else,” we say to ourselves, not realizing that the next place will be just as full of oppressions as this place.  “If only I met the right person,” we say, not realizing that the next person is just as imperfect as we are, and just as much in need, driven by their own desires.  “If only I had more money,” we say, not realizing that money doesn’t change who we are, it only magnifies who we are, causing our problems to increase, not decrease.  “If only I had the right job,” we say, not realizing that jobs are not about the needs of the employees, but the needs of the owners or customers, so employees always get the short shrift, no matter what the context (this isn’t always the case for professionals—the only workers who are treated as full human beings).  “If only I had more pleasure,” we say, but pleasure only requires more pleasure, creating a cycle of oppression. 

            What we really want is an easy solution that will meet all of our needs.  Of course, part of the problem is that we don’t actually want what we need.  We need to work hard to become the best of who we are.  We need to face our fears to be free of them.  We need to refuse our desires at times in order to obtain our true desire.  The most amazing thing is that at times we need to be still and do nothing, allowing others to provide for us completely, just as if we were a baby, in full trust.  Of course, none of us are wise enough to know when is the time to do one or the other.

  1. Humans are sinful
Sin is the destruction of relationship, disloyalty, the harm of the Other.  Sin is disloyalty to God who created us, who loves us and provides all good things for us to meet our needs.  We tend to think much more of ourselves than God.  And even though our relationship with God is much less complex than our relationship to government or family, and much more central to our needs, we gravitate toward the latter relationships rather than the former. 

Sin is harming other people, who were made in God’s image, because of our own fears and desires.  It is acting out destruction against others because it is better for us.  It is not acting for the benefit of others, even though it is in our power to do so, because of our own fears and drives.  It is listening to that which oppress us rather than God’s Spirit who leads us to do what is good for all.

We do not sin because of Adam’s sin.  Rather, each and every one of us enacts Adam’s sin ourselves.  We believe in our independence more than we believe in our relationship with God.  We rely more on our sense of fear and our sense of need rather than our more obvious factual knowledge of another’s need. 

Why are we sinful?  Because we are weak.  Even our displays of strength—our technology, our ability to travel in space, our ability to fly around the earth in hours, our communication with each other no matter where we live, our growth of amazing amounts of food, our ability to control the atom, our ability to crush diseases—are paired directly with our weaknesses—the multiplication of diseases, the ability to destroy innocents at the push of a button, two billion people starving, a thriving porn industry and slavery associated with that, an epidemic of homelessness, diseases that ravage a continent although they can be stopped, millions of people drinking contaminated water.  The internet is used to gossip and dishonor much more than uphold the good.  Television is used to encourage fear instead of provide social benefit.  Knowledge of the Bible is used to destroy people’s morality instead of building up people’s love of God and others. 


But I can’t really blame anyone.  I do the same things, although I try not to.  I am weak.  I am human.  Lord, let me dive into You so Your love drowns my desires and fears.  Let me come out a new creature of purity and new hope.

No comments:

Post a Comment