Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the earth — Matthew 5:5
A sentiment of superiority keeps us cool and practical; the mere facts would make our knees knock under as with religious fear. — G.K. Chesterton from Heretics
I wonder, in reading through Heretics, about whom a Chesterton would write today. Mark Steyn, he of the sons of the prophets, speaks most often on politicians and popular culture figures — as if there is now any difference between politics and pop culture, which may be a good part of our problem. Chesterton safaried on an intellectual savannah trod by Shaws, Wells, and Orwells, to name but a few. I'm afraid he would hardly waste a round on the lock-step lemmings, swarming rodents, and shambling opossums that have inherited the plain today. Perhaps there are no Chestertons because there is no quarry worthy of such hunters. Did Nimrod stop to weep for himself when he saw the end of Smilodon?
Truly the old, bold socialists, eugenicists, and strong men who stalked under the noon sun are gone, replaced by careful and cowardly creatures of the night that scurry from shadow to shadow lest we see their true form. Apart from the insulated and the tenured like Peter Singer, few of the "pro-choice" advocates in our day admit that they long for a better race of men through more selective breeding, and, by the way, far fewer men for the most part. They have learned the chameleon trick of taking on the surrounding colors, especially the color of freedom, as they lurk and wait to strike. It's just me probably, but I'd rather take my chances face to face with the grinning tiger of the day than be struck by an ambushing death adder.
I can't say as I blame the skulkers, at least here in America. Coming out and saying that you are for de-populating the earth, turning North America into a theme park, and breeding slave races on the old government plantation probably isn't going to get you a whole lot of votes or funding for the U.S. Department of Indoctrination. Camouflage and stealth: it's not just for tanks and planes any more.
In Chesterton's day he could still talk about the "humility of the man of science", a phrase many of us find quaintly amusing. Even Chesterton was amused by it for he saw their day passing as surely and swiftly as those hunters with the Clovis point saw the passing of the giant ground sloth or the mastodon. Projecting forward, he could see the inevitably of rising pride and the creation of the lordly scientific priesthood who shake their big, rattling gourds at us in the Twenty-First Century of what is now called — so appropriately — the Common Era.
The path of devolution is always the same. First comes wonder with its beloved foster child, humility. Humility gives birth to discovery. Discovery always rebels against his parent, sows his wild oats, and reaps his bastard offspring, power. Power and pride form their unholy union from which comes their first-born, unintended consequences, then his twin brothers, death and destruction. A rebirth of discovery is always denied to power and pride. If we doubt God, He answers us thus. Still, the reign of power and pride may be long, counter-balanced as it is by God's grace in raising up children to humility from the very stones of the earth.
That's Chesterton's point in the opening quote: that merely looking at things as they are tends to make us more humble, to set ablaze our sophisticated cool. We humans are very good at thinking that a name for something is the same as an explanation. It's not the facts that poison humility; it is someone's interpretation of the facts. We could walk well on the stones in our path. It's the bumperstickers that trip us up.
I even miss the good old days when we thought science was impressively objective, isolated, and concerned only with discovery for discovery's sake. You know how it used to be in science fiction when the lone, eccentric genius created some grand new thing in his basement la-BORE-atory. The emotional humanist hero would come along to ejaculate, "But think what would happen if it fell into the wrong hands!" Yep, those days are long gone. Too many of our current heroes are Boromirs who see the power of darkness as a "gift" that they may conquer, only to become that which they vanquish.
Reading through the New Testament, everyone has come to the Beatitudes. To this day, every time I read through the Sermon on the Mount, I fight the same thought: He's got to be kidding. Jesus, I find myself saying, You can't be serious about this stuff. Anybody who tries to follow Christ's teaching here will be eaten alive in this world. If you are going to try this, your best bet is to go ahead and die young because otherwise you'll wind up living in a cardboard box and getting mugged on a daily basis. Shoot, they'll probably even take your cardboard box.
The better part of me says, though, that cynical-me is wrong. He meant what He said, and He meant for us to live it. He did not promise that it would be easy. There are snakes in the brush, and, while old Smiley is gone, there are still lions and tigers and bears, not to mention jackals aplenty. All that's missing are the meek — or as more modern translations sometimes say, the gentle.
The meek are ones strong enough to be gentle, brave enough to fear, and bold enough to be humble. They inherit the earth because those who reject meekness reject man and his abode along with it. We'll inherit what we appreciate — that is, what gains value for us, or that to which we give or add value. We wonder at ourselves, at the cosmos, at the Creator. The legitimate explanations of science only serve to deepen our wonder, to add even more value to that which we have been given.
The world will always prefer the giants who look from a distance with disdain down upon the meek and — don't miss it — the lowly. They are impressed by his man-made armor of snark, his heavy weapons of vulgarity and mockery. They see no vulnerability and gather fearlessly in his wake.
Across the way comes one of those hillbillies, some kid just in from herding sheep and goats. Perhaps the crowd behind the giant smells the intruder before they see him, for indeed he must smell like sheep. They see him pause and stoop at the brook to pick up five stones cut out from the mountain and polished smooth without hands.
The humble shepherd looks up at the giant. He doesn't seem to see the armor or the shield or the spear. He looks the giant in the eye and sees the bare seat of his opponent's thoughts. The hillbilly says, "He's so big! How can I miss?"
11 comments:
Some days my nephew feels sorry for me because I have to work very long hours. Days like the last couple, I feel sorry for him because he is out in it, fighting the cold, cutting ice, unfreezing pipes. We'll be below zero tonight for the second time this winter -- not unusual but it doesn't happen every year.
At our house, we got mostly sleet -- 3 or 4 inches -- with a little bit of ice underneath and maybe an inch or two of snow on top. Sleet's better than freezing rain because it doesn't pull the power lines down, but it's plenty bad enough. I can get out and about if I can get my garage doors up. I haven't done it yet, though. No hurry.
Got this in an email from an old high school buddy down in Arkansas. "Jesus Loves Me" for the white-hairs:
Jesus loves me, this I know,
Though my hair is white as snow
Though my sight is growing dim,
Still He bids me trust in Him.
(CHORUS)
YES, JESUS LOVES ME.. YES, JESUS LOVES ME..
YES, JESUS LOVES ME, FOR THE BIBLE TELLS ME SO.
Though my steps are oh, so slow,
With my hand in His I'll go
On through life, let come what may,
He'll be there to lead the way.
(CHORUS)
When the nights are dark and long,
In my heart He puts a song..
Telling me in words so clear,
"Have no fear, for I am near."
(CHORUS)
When my work on earth is done,
And life's victories have been won.
He will take me home above,
Then I'll understand His love.
(CHORUS)
I love Jesus, does He know?
Have I ever told Him so?
Jesus loves to hear me say,
That I love Him every day.
(CHORUS)
Good post, Mush. At many times in it it reads like a soliloquy, like by the old Bard. Especially the beginning. I like that. The way it sounds.
The "Beatitudes". Try to imagine if He didn't say them.
I thinks it's wonderful how He showed us how to pray too. Using words like "Our" and "us". Praying with us.
That's right. We're in Christ, so it's always "us" -- in Him together whether we like it or not. When He prays, we pray, and when we pray, He prays. Thinking about it that way might have a tendency to change our view of the significance and power of prayer.
As to the soliloquy sound, if I have any gift in reading, it is probably to sometimes pick up the writer's rhythm -- the beat. I had been reading Heretics that rhythm may have carried over.
I think that's what makes some writers fun to read right from the first (Tolkien, Emily Dickinson), other writers challenging at first but very rewarding once you pick it up (Joyce, Hopkins) -- and then, some writers just a chore forever.
Wonder full in deed (and word).
That's Chesterton's point in the opening quote: that merely looking at things as they are tends to make us more humble, to set ablaze our sophisticated cool. We humans are very good at thinking that a name for something is the same as an explanation.
I recently gave an 'f/zero' talk to a photo group along these lines, that looking at things prevents us from seeing until we learn the art of contemplation - the mere asking "what are you?" with 0 expectations.
3 or 4 people got it; the rest were wtf.
3 or 4 is better than 0
Rick's right -- if we can get one or two or three to just stop once in a while it is a success. You're doing the Lord's work, for sure.
I got around to watching Winter's Bone last night, shot here locally. I'll have to give it some consideration and watch it again. It's hardly The Road, but it is poetic -- or at least it understands that there is such a thing a poetry. The lead actress did an exceptional job, and I'm sure she will be recognized for it. However, as far as I'm concerned, the actor who played "Teardrop" was perfect. It's very easy to overplay such a character, but he was right on the money. There's nothing noticeable about it -- until the film is finished, as it should be.
So I'll have to watch it again a time or two and possibly do a review after that.
I didn't know it was filmed in your neck of the woods. Winter's Bone is now in the Netflix cue.
Just saw a good movie Sat night:
The Fall
It's free if you have Netflix and set up for the instant downloads. The quality though is not good - which is a shame because it is beautifully filmed. I think I'll rent it on DVD or Bluray. I think you would enjoy it.
Yes, just down in the next county, and they used some local people in it.
I'll have to check out The Fall -- stories of stories and how they make us who we are.
There's a line like that in this Front Porch Republic piece: The stories will attempt to cover the facts, but the facts always bear different interpretations; the art of history is essentially the art of good story telling.
I also see that the actor I admire is John Hawkes. I remember his character from Perfect Storm, but he was so in character that I didn't recognize him.
I'll have to check and see if I've posted my "Booger Red" story. It would go along with Winter's Bone.
I like that guy from Perfect Storm.
Mush,
I watched Winter's Bone the other night. I wasn't sure how I felt about it directly after it, but I keep thinking about it. It stays with you. Those are the best kind.
The young lady does a fantastic job and, Teardrop...it was nice to know it was him ahead of time. He was perfect. I'm not sure I'd have known it was him. Good to see him doing well. Hope he's recognized for this performance too.
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