Salvation You Would Want
By Charles Rush
March 25, 2007
Matthew 5: 3-10
[ Audio
(mp3, 5.8Mb) ]
the crowds Jesus went up to the mountain and there he began teaching them saying: Blessed are those who have a heart for the dispossessed for theirs is the Kingdom of Heaven. Blessed are those who have compassion for others in suffering, for they too shall be comforted. Blessed are those who understand their limits and live in them, for they will inherit all this world has to offer. Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for what is right and virtuous, for they shall be filled up. Blessed are those that are merciful, for they shall have mercy shown them. Blessed are those that have a character of integrity, for they shall see God. Blessed are those who are reconciling and make the peace, for they shall be called the Sons and Daughters of God.&rdquot;
Several years ago I was asked to
review a book. It was about
fundamentalist Christians in Dallas, Texas. The book tells about a mission trip
that they take to South America with their youth group, like our mission trips…
only different. It seems that the Fundamentalists would set up a pretty
sophisticated movie projector and show a free film at night, which they would
advertise for a couple days previously. The film was about the Rapture. It was
a rather literal depiction of the highly allegorical book of Revelation. The
film depicts 'the end days' when a false Messiah will come and deceive the
countries of the world, probably through the United Nations, and persecution,
famine, and all manner of natural disaster will happen. Then suddenly Jesus
comes back and in an instant, all of the true believers will be ascended into
the heavens. The film shows two people driving in a car, one gone and the other
left behind. And the film ends with "La
Gran Pregunta", the big question. If Jesus were to come back today,
would you go to heaven or hell?
This thinking, as you know, is very
prevalent, not only among Fundamentalists but, with a few variations, among the
Orthodox in the Catholic tradition as well. I read just a week ago that the
Chaplain for one of the Pro Football teams was placed on administrative leave
for saying that Jews don't go to heaven because they don't confess Jesus as
their Lord and Savior.
Now, one of the more profound
affirmations made by all of Abrahamic faith traditions: Judaism, Christianity,
and Islam is the idea that we all have to give an account of our lives to the Almighty. It means that there is a moral
canopy of wise judgment beyond all of us. It means that we bear
responsibility in an ultimate way for the manner in which we lead our lives,
what we do and what we leave undone. And it comes quite naturally, I might add,
when people have some time and know that they are going to die in a short
while, to reflect on what they have been about and whether or not it has been a
worthwhile life.
But, it has never been convincing to
me that the mere confession of allegiance to the Almighty, through Jesus or
Allah or Moses is enough to pass muster before the court of Divine Justice. The
Force which created the immense universe will surely have a depth of
discernment and a penetrating insight into who we really are and what we are
actually about that we will immediately
respond in respectful awe. Or as, St. Paul used to say, "Every knee will
bow and every tongue confess". The actual God of the Universe, simply has
to be more complicated and sophisticated than this simplistic approach
suggests.
In point of fact, this approach to
spirituality is rather elementary on the scale of moral development as
developed by Psychologists who study the maturation of our moral consciousness
like Lawrence Kohlberg at Harvard University. It is based on reward and punishment, stage 1 of Kohlberg's 6 stages of moral development. If we believe
the right things, then we get a ticket through the pearly gates. If we don't,
we end up in a form of Hell personally tailored to suit our spiritual vices…
like the adulterer's in Dante's Inferno that perpetually lust for one another
and can see one another and exchange longing for one another but are prevented
from actual contact.
It is elementary in approach because
it is based on extrinsic reward rather than intrinsic value. Extrinsic rewards
encourage a quid pro quo approach to living, a conditional morality. You owe me
this and for this I give you that. Now much of the world needs to operate that
way, particularly on the mundane level. It is the way we operate most of our
simple business transactions, the way we run the daily chores of household
living at home. "You finish your homework, we can go to MacDonald's."
"You wash the car, I'll pay you X".
But extrinsic rewards are very limited
motivators as we know. They only work best on simple, mundane transactions.
They work less and less well as we begin to try to motivate people's souls. We
all run up against this wall at some point. "If you get a part in the
play, I'll buy you a TV/DVD/Game Boy rig for your room." Sometimes it
works, but you feel nervous and vulnerable before you say it because you know…
you know… that your teenagers will undermine the situation somehow if their
heart is not in it and if their heart is not in it, this approach to motivation
won't work, no matter how big the reward. And you will know that you are at the
limit on this approach because it will feel risky and involve some pretty big
rewards.
The extrinsic approach works less well
as we move toward motivating what is inside of us. I watched a neighbor, as
many of us have, whose marriage just lacked intimacy. I didn't know them well
enough or long enough to have any real idea of why it lacked intimacy or what
was to blame. But what I remember was how painful it was from a distance when
he tried to redeem it by extravagant gifting- jewelry, car, dream vacations-
they worked but… with diminishing
returns, for shorter periods of time. As these exterior motivators got bigger,
the internal relationship that he wanted proved more fleeting and elusive. It
dragged out over quite a period of time but I remember a conversation where he
voiced what he had been doing… how stupid and frustrated he felt.
What we want is mutuality. We want interdependence and reciprocal
relatedness that makes for caring intimacy. Quid pro quo relations are
merely conditional and extrinsic.
As we move towards the core of our
being, who we are and what we are about, we have to think more intrinsically.
That is what Jesus was trying to teach us spiritually. He taught us to live lives that are
intrinsically worthwhile. If you live out of these values and in this
way, you will have a blessed life; you will find a quality of fulfillment that
you are looking for spiritually and emotionally. You will be living out of our
Spiritual center, out of who you were meant to become.
We want to live from the inside
out. We want our outer life to be a realization of who we are inside
and what we are all about. There is a quality to that so surpasses extrinsic
motivation in breadth and depth.
I've been privileged to know a few
entrepreneurs that exhibited this inside/out approach to their work that is
quite different from the experience of work that most people have.
Entrepreneur's start with an idea.
Perhaps most importantly, it is their idea. They work it through,
line up the resources and the financing, watch it come to fruition in the marketplace,
and sometimes grow like a weed, hiring new people, and, when it all comes
together, the enterprise starts throwing off mad cash…
And you talk to them, flush with
success, and in the middle of this conversation, they say "It's not about the money." I'm
like "What do you mean it's not about the money? You have a big, new house
and a brand new high, end Porsche." "Yeah, great car, drives like
zippeddee doo… but it's not about the money." And they are not pulling
your leg because… it is about so much more than the money. Sure, everyone likes
a bigger dwelling space, new appliances… But, it is so much more when it
happens because
you have actualized something that is within you; it is so much more when you
do that and you win the recognition of your peers, the respect of others when
they meet you. It is so much more when you exercise meaningful leadership and
develop a community enterprise and make the lives of all those that are working
for you better. It is so much more when you can genuinely feel like the world
is a better place because of your small contribution, your invention.
And if it throws off great material blessing, so much the better. But it is not
about the money alone, it is about all these things and all of them coming from
the inside out. That is
fulfilling in a deep way.
I think of that single mother in
Edinburgh, Scotland that was on the dole twenty years ago. She started writing
a story for her son about the world of magic that would help him see some of
the mystery of the world and teach about what was important. She found an agent
and a publisher… way led to way… and Harry Potter made J.K. Rowling one of the
richest people in all of Britain. Now, I've never heard her interviewed but I
bet that she would also tell you, "It's not about the money."
One of my friends from college owned a
small publishing company and he signed that same unknown author of children's
books from Edinburgh, Scotland for the American rights to her work back when
she was nobody. After the publication of that first book, when it became
obvious that Harry Potter would be a publishing success of record proportions,
he told me it was like having the tiger by the tail. Way led to way, this was
so big, that he couldn't simply sell her contract, he actually ended up selling
his whole company to one of the major publishing houses. And now he is retired.
When I talk to him about what that is like, he more or less describes it as
hitting the lotto. It is great, materially quite prosperous, but it doesn't
have the same fulfilling quality to it that actually writing the story has, of
actually watching as the characters of your imagination bloom and become stable
fixtures on the imaginations of and entire generation of children. That
fulfillment comes from inside/out, from living out of our center and watching
it bloom around us. That is more fulfilling by far.
Spiritual maturity is all about moving
from extrinsic motivations to intrinsic ones. It is all about finding a way of
living that is intrinsically worthwhile.
It is a way of living that you don't have to regret if disappointment and
tragedy comes your way because the quality of fulfillment that comes from
substantial love and substantial actualization of your potential. You can live
with yourself and sleep at night. You don't need outside motivations to tease
you into your routine; you do what you do because that is what you are about.
The Psychoanalyst Erik Erikson has
shown that, as we go through life, we have different internal issues that
define our psychsocial development at different phases of our life. For
example, in school age children, we are wrestling with developing industry and
working through inferiority. The psychosocial goal is to develop a sense of
competence, pride in the positive sense of that word.
In adolescence, we are trying to
develop a sense of our own identity and to avoid a sense of confusion. The goal
that we are trying to achieve is one of fidelity, a place where we are true to
our selves and also loyal to our friends. You notice just how much time
teenager spend reflecting on cheating and betrayal; how much energy goes into
dealing with themselves and whether they find themselves acceptable or not.
In young adulthood, we the broadest
psychosocial issue is developing intimacy and working through a sense of
isolation. The goal that we want to achieve is that of love, a caring and being
cared for.
In mature adulthood, our psychosocial
issue is developing generativity, growing things in ways that will out live us.
Likewise, we are seeking to avoid stagnation, that sense of dead end that
happens when careers are blunted or marriages don't work out like they are
supposed to. The goal is to develop care.
And in the final stage of our life, we
deal with the psychosocial issue of integrity and overcoming despair and
disgust. We are asking ourselves questions in a more penetrating way, 'was my life worth living?' Was it
significant? Did I make an impact that was worth the energy that was put into
me. Here we have to deal with regret in a deeper way that previously.
This is a quality of regret that can occasionally overwhelm us with a sense of
despair. People have different ways of dealing with the issue of integrity and
regret: one of them is to tell stories of their lives over and over. They are
processing their lives when they do that, internally assessing the story of
their lives again and it is important to let them repeat stories that you have
heard before for this reason. The goal in this phase of life is wisdom.
What strikes me about Erikson's description
of our life cycle is how fundamentally spiritual the process of psychsocial
maturation really is. If you look at Erikson's full list from infancy on, what
is it that we are trying to achieve? Hope, will, purpose, competence, fidelity, love,
care, wisdom. These are the intrinsic questions that we are wrestling with
as we move through the cycle of our life.
What Jesus pointed us towards, are
spiritual qualities that help us to achieve the same internal goals and to live
a life here and now that is richer and more substantial than the alternative.
When he says, "Blessed are those who show compassion, who live a life of
love… Blessed are those who show mercy… who have integrity, who long for what
is virtuous and right.", he is inviting us to simply try a spiritual way of being that
will validate itself in a better way of living.
Just try the life of love, trying
praying for your enemies, try focusing on what makes for peace; pray to be
surrounded by people of substantial spiritual quality that will positively
influence you; pray that you will be a person of integrity. What you will find
is that this is an intrinsically richer, more substantial way of being in our
world. What you will find is that your life is more fulfilling and your
relationships around you start to become like a garden of beautiful things that
bloom wonderfully with a little tending. You will see the world healing around
you.
There is a story about a Navajo
Grandfather who once told his grandson, "Two wolves live inside me. One is
the bad wolf, full of greed and laziness, full of anger and jealousy and
regret. The other is the good wolf, full of joy and compassion and willingness
and a great love for the world. All the time these two wolves are fighting
inside me."
"But Grandfather,"
the boy said, "Which wolf will win?"
The grandfather
answered, "The one I feed."
We are indeed a
strange admixture of virtue and vice, noble purpose and petty concern. We think
great thoughts and perverted ones too. We are our best champion and our own worst
enemy. My brothers and sisters, focus yourself on intrinsically worthy living.
As St. Paul said in Philippians, and is quoted on the front of our church.
"Whatever is true, whatever is excellent, anything worthy of praise,
whatever is beautiful, think on these things". Amen.
© 2007
Charles Rush.
All rights reserved.