The Violence of Modernity – And A Way Out

The calm voice at the helm says, “Make it so…” and with it, the mantra of modernity is invoked. The philosophy that governs our culture is rooted in violence, the ability to make things happen and to control the outcome. It is a deeply factual belief. We can indeed make things happen, and, in a limited way, control their outcome. But we soon discover (and have proven it time and again) that our ability to control is quite limited. Many, many unforeseeable consequences flow from every action. If I am working in a very, self-contained environment, then the illusion of total control can be maintained for a very long time. If, say, I am building a watch, my actions and their results can remain on a desktop. However, when the scale of action begins to increase, the lack of true control begins to manifest itself. Actions on the level of an entire society or culture are beyond our ability to manage. A culture is not a very large watch.

But we think it is. That delusion lies at the very heart of the philosophy of modernity.

The arguments supporting the success of modernity are always misleading. The single desired effect becomes the focus while the unintended consequences that follow in its wake are ignored. Modernity always wins, because it cooks the books.

The work of “making it so,” is always an act of violence. We take what is not so and force it to be otherwise. Whether it is the violence of a plow making a field suitable for planting, or the violence of creating a parking lot, human beings have formed and shaped their world by “making it so,” throughout our existence. The field and the parking lot, as innocuous and innocent as they may be, also create consequences that were not part of the plan. The only means of dealing with these consequences are to employ more violence to alter things yet again (requiring yet more violence, ad infinitum), or to treat the consequences as an acceptable change.

In this sense, to be an active part of the world is to employ violence. We do not sit lightly on the surface of our planet. Most human societies across history, have made a moderate peace with the world in which they live, using forms of violence whose consequences have been well-enough tolerated and accounted for so as to be bearable. The rate of change in such societies was modest, and within the limits that a culture could easily accommodate.

Large and rapid change is another thing entirely. “Changing the world,” under a variety of slogans, is the essence of the modern project. Modernity is not about how to live rightly in the world, but about how to make the world itself live rightly. The difference could hardly be greater. The inception of modernity, across the 18th and 19th centuries, was marked by revolution. The Industrial Revolution, the rise of various forms of capitalism, the birth of the modern state with its political revolutions, all initiated a period of ceaseless change marked by winners and losers. Of course, success is measured by statistics that blur the edges of reality. X-number of people find their incomes increased, while only Y-number of people suffer displacement and ruination. So long as X is greater than Y, the change is a success. The trick is to be an X.

The ceaseless re-invention of the better world rarely takes stock of its own actions. That large amounts of any present ruination that are the result of the last push for progress is ignored. It is treated as nothing more than another set of problems to be fixed. As the fixes add up, a toxic culture begins to emerge: food that cannot be eaten; air that cannot be breathed; relationships that cannot be endured; safety that cannot be maintained, etc. As the toxicity rises, so the demand for ever more action and change grows, and, with it, the increase in violence (of all types). The amount of our human existence that now requires rather constant technological intervention is staggering. The entire modern pattern of dating, marriage, family and procreation are impossible without chemical and biological intervention. There has been no “sexual revolution,” only the application of technology into one of the most all-pervasive and normal parts of human existence, creating an artificial aspect to our lives that rests on violence. The abortion of nearly one-third of all children conceived is but a single example. The foundations of our present society are built on doing profound violence to human nature.

It should be noted that I have not suggested some mode of existence that is free of violence. Human beings make things happen, as does most of creation. Modernity, however, is another matter. Its better world has no limits, its project is never-ending. What are the proper limits of violence? Are there boundaries that must not be crossed?

Modernity has as its goal the creation of a better world with no particular reference to God – it is a secular concept. As such, that which constitutes “better” is, or can be, a shifting definition. In Soviet Russia it was one thing, in Nazi Germany another, in Consumer-Capitalist societies yet another still. Indeed, that which is “better” is often the subject of the political sphere. But there is no inherent content to the “better,” nor any inherent limits on the measures taken to achieve it. The pursuit of the better (“progress”) becomes its own morality. [An aside: Are you being consulted about the changes that will come about as the result of AI?]

The approach of classical Christianity does not oppose change (there is always change), nor does it deny that one thing might be better than another. But the “good” which gives every action its meaning is God Himself, as made known in Christ. In classical terms, this is expressed as “keeping the commandments.” Those commandments are summarized in the love of God and the love of neighbor. There are other elements within the commandments of Christ that minimize and restrict the use of violence.

There is, for example, no commandment to make the world a better place, nor even to make progress towards a better world. The “better world” concept is, historically, a heretical borrowing from Christianity, a secularization of the notion of the Kingdom of God, translated into terms of progressive technology and laws (violence). But, in truth, the management of history’s outcomes is idolatrous. Only God controls the outcome of history.

My experience is that questioning our responsibility for history’s outcome will always be met with anxious objections that we would be agreeing “to do nothing” and the results would be terrible. Keeping the commandments of Christ is not doing nothing. It is, however, the refusal to use violence to force the world into ever-changing imaginary versions of the good.

I will cite a somewhat controversial example (all examples would be controversial, for modernists love nothing better than to argue about how to next use violence to improve the world). Consider the task of education. Teaching children to read, write and do numbers is not a terribly modern thing. It has been done for centuries, and, occasionally, done rather successfully. But the education industry (a subset of government) exists as an ever-changing set of standards, techniques, and procedures, whose constantly changing results occasion ever-increasing testing, change, control, management and violence to yield frequently lesser results. It has largely produced a cult of management and administration (the bane of every teacher’s existence). This example could be, mutatis mutandis, multiplied over the whole of our increasingly dysfunctional culture.

Sadly, as the results of modernity’s violent progress become more dysfunctional, the greater the temptation grows to do more of the same. Every problem is greeted only with the question of how it might be fixed, with no one ever suggesting that the fixing of the world might be our largest problem.

Again, this is not an all-or-nothing thing. The classical world was not passive nor was there an absence of change. Modernity has chosen economics as the measure of the good, treating increasing productivity as the engine of progress and prosperity as the primary measure of a better world. Debates over the best means of driving such productivity, whether through command-and-control or passive market forces, have been the primary arguments within modernity.

There are many, many other goods that could be, and have been the measure of a culture. The only reason for using economic productivity is the false belief that material prosperity is the fount of all blessings. If we are rich enough, we will be happy.

At the very dark end of the spectrum, America’s philosophical assumptions have made it the servant of modernity-as-export where literal violence is the day-to-day result. Remaking the Middle East has not only failed (completely) but cost hundreds of thousands of lives, a large proportion of which were complete innocents. The resulting chaos has been, at best, a distraction from our unrelenting pleasure in the entertainment industry, though our wars have generated a very popular genre of video game. Violence itself has become a consumer product.

This picture of the modern world can, in the modern Christian mind, provoke an immediate response of wondering what can be done to change it. The difficult answer is to quit living as though modernity were true. Quit validating modernity’s questions. Do not ask, “How can we fix the world?” Instead, ask, “How should Christians live?” and give the outcome of history back to God.

How should we live?

  • First, live as though in the coming of Jesus Christ, the Kingdom of God has been inaugurated into the world and the outcome of history has already been determined. (Quit worrying)
  • Second, love people as the very image of God and resist the temptation to improve them.
  • Third, refuse to make economics the basis of your life. Your job is not even of secondary importance.
  • Fourth, quit arguing about politics as though the political realm were the answer to the world’s problems. It gives it power that is not legitimate and enables a project that is anti-God.
  • Fifth, learn to love your enemies. God did not place them in the world for us to fix or eliminate. If possible, refrain from violence.
  • Sixth, raise the taking of human life to a matter of prime importance and refuse to accept violence as a means to peace. Every single life is a vast and irreplaceable treasure.
  • Seventh, cultivate contentment rather than pleasure. It will help you consume less and free you from slavery to your economic masters.
  • Eighth, as much as possible, think small. You are not in charge of the world. Love what is local, at hand, personal, intimate, unique, and natural. It’s a preference that matters.
  • Ninth, learn another language. Very few things are better at teaching you about who you are not.
  • Tenth, be thankful for everything, remembering that the world we live in and everything in it belongs to God.

That’s but a minor list, a few things that occur to me offhand. They are things that encourage us to live in a “non-modern” manner. It is worth noting that when Roman soldiers approached John the Baptist and asked him how they should live, he told them to be content with their wages and to do violence to no one. They were in charge of the world in their day – or so they could mistakenly think. My few bits of advice are of a piece with that beloved saint’s words.

About Fr. Stephen Freeman

Fr. Stephen is a retired Archpriest of the Orthodox Church in America. He is also author of Everywhere Present: Christianity in a One-Storey Universe, and Face to Face: Knowing God Beyond Our Shame, as well as the Glory to God podcast series on Ancient Faith Radio.



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36 responses to “The Violence of Modernity – And A Way Out”

  1. Melba Whitaker Avatar
    Melba Whitaker

    Thank you – I needed to hear this and to read your list at the end – finally a true Christian response.

  2. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    2 quick questions:

    Are farmers now criminals because they plow their fields violently? 🙂

    How are we to understand the Genesis commandment to subdue creation? Is this only referring to environmental creation care?

    Other than that, I wish I had read this article first 2 years or so ago when I started reading this blog! Thanks.

  3. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Matthew,
    Yes, farmers do violence, I said as much in the article. But note this paragraph:

    In this sense, to be an active part of the world is to employ violence. We do not sit lightly on the surface of our planet. Most human societies across history, have made a moderate peace with the world in which they live, using forms of violence whose consequences have been well-enough tolerated and accounted for so as to be bearable. The rate of change in such societies was modest, and within the limits that a culture could easily accommodate.

    To be a Christian is not to become an ideologue. There is the need for virtue: prudence, wisdom, etc. Some forms of farming are more violent, more consequential than others. We choose to live lightly when we can. A farmer should love the land. In my experience, most farmers do precisely that. It is only when the economics of modernity push them ever further into extreme measures of productivity, etc., that the violence becomes problematic. As noted in the article, economics (profit) is insufficient as a measure of what is good.

    A very weak link in modernity is its dismal vision of the good, and the inability of its political systems to articulate the good. The state cannot do what a truly faith-based culture can and should do.

  4. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    Thanks so much Fr. Stephen:

    You said:

    “The state cannot do what a truly faith-based culture can and should do.”

    We had a faith-based culture in Europe. It lead to religious wars and bloodshed. It burned “heretics” at the stake. The secularists seemed to have saved Europe from this craziness, then they too began to shed blood. The story of Cain and Abel lingers on an on … sadly … regardless of who is in control.

    I just want to be like Christ.

  5. Mark Spurlock Avatar
    Mark Spurlock

    Father Stephen,

    A superb list; I will comment on the most specific admonition in it (“learn another language” because my daughter and I were discussing language on our drive home from church yesterday. Even if a person studies other languages without ever becoming fluent, the study can lead to awareness that other humans not only have different thoughts, but the majority of them formulate their thoughts differently from English speakers.

    Discovering these truths are important to counter the error that language shapes and even controls reality. When you become aware of the fundamental differences in language, you realize how much your tongue informs your perception, but only of one approximation of reality.

  6. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    Thanks so much Mark.

    Even though I can understand and speak German, I have a feeling when I am talking in German I am really talking like an American. In other words, I don´t formulate my thoughts like Germans. This reality sometimes negatively affects communication with family members, but it teaches me too that humans are very different from one another.

  7. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    Humans … also … share a lot in common Mark. Didn´t want to forget that! 🙂

  8. David E. Rockett Avatar

    Thank you Father…good stuff to ponder here.
    david

  9. Mark Spurlock Avatar
    Mark Spurlock

    Matthew:

    Of course…because language is acquired. Had you been born in a German-speaking country and learned German first, then it would be the tool you were most familiar with for expressing thoughts and trying to represent reality when communicating.

    Language is an important general trapping of humanity, but the particular is circumstantial.

  10. Justin Avatar
    Justin

    I (we, including my wife) have just now come to realize the “illusion of control” when it comes to our, now mostly grown, children. Thus, our failures are starkly evident and accusing. I know it’s a lie, but it seems impossible to not believe it, to not blame myself for the failures of our children. At times it’s overwhelming. There is a lesson here we haven’t understood, not yet, that is likely centered on repentance.

  11. Helen Avatar
    Helen

    Thank you Father. Beautiful reminder of how to live.
    The illusion of being X …we seemed to be losing that here in the States; it began for me with 9-11 attacks. It continues with the increasingly common catastrophic weather and their effects on my insurance premiums.

  12. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Justin,
    I’ve counseled with young parents who are afraid they’ll make mistakes with their children. I assure them that they definitely will. Therefore, they should pray, repent, and ask forgiveness of one another often. Nobody gets it right. Some just get it a little righter than others…and there’s a lot of genetics and epigenetics involved…and…when they’re teens, they’re bathed in a culture over which we pretty much no control at all.

    Children will break your heart and teach you to love. God give us grace!

  13. Susannah Avatar
    Susannah

    Beautiful article, Father. Thank you! Here is a nice poem by our friend Barbara Roquemore:
    (For A little Bird)
    Your winged messenger arrived
    In the hour of sunset.
    All nature quiet and calm.
    A soft breeze Faded, a last breath
    Before earth falls into depth of dark.

    The messenger sang your words
    In a language I did not know,
    But my heart opened, Listened.
    Northern was under my control.

    He told me Who sent him.
    That I had not Listened to others who came.
    Persons, creatures, plants, waters.
    Shells, stones, even soil, waiting for me.
    Each spoke in its language your message, Your name,

    Your winged messenger sang “don’t Forget,
    This is not the world you belong to,
    But it offers the path to the Father Who waits.
    Accept all as His Will. ”Pain, illness mere shadows
    From the cross of His son. Follow these Footsteps home.”

    The messenger Flew off still singing
    “ Don’t forget, live in the world of the heart.
    Listen to the messengers.”
    _____________

    Then

  14. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Susannah,
    Thank you!

  15. Susanah Avatar
    Susanah

    Forgive me father, I posted an unedited version of my friends nice poem. It should read:

    (For A little Bird)

    Your winged messenger arrived
    In the hour of sunset.
    All nature quiet and calm.
    A soft breeze faded, a last breath
    Before earth falls into depth of dark.

    The messenger sang your words
    In a language I did not know,
    But my heart opened, Listened.
    Nothing was under my control.

    He told me Who sent him.
    That I had not Listened to others who came.
    Persons, creatures, plants, waters.
    Shells, stones, even soil, waiting for me.
    Each spoke in its language your message, Your name,

    Your winged messenger sang “don’t forget,
    This is not the world you belong to,
    But it offers the path to the Father Who waits.
    Accept all as His Will. ”Pain, illness mere shadows
    From the cross of His son. Follow these footsteps home.”

    The messenger flew off still singing
    “ Don’t forget, live in the world of the heart.
    Listen to the messengers.”
    _____________
    It would appear that one cof the first consequences of the Fall resulted in an act of violence initiated by God Himself… the procuring of the skins to clothe the naked Adam and Eve. It wophld seem all of creation was troiubled by man’s disobedience. Dear God, Forgive us and bring all creation back home toi a peraceful God.

    I suppose even taking antibiotics will be an act of violence against someone.

  16. Susannah Avatar
    Susannah

    (For A little Bird)

    Your winged messenger arrived
    In the hour of sunset.
    All nature quiet and calm.
    A soft breeze faded, a last breath
    Before earth falls into depth of dark.

    The messenger sang your words
    In a language I did not know,
    But my heart opened, Listened.
    Nothing was under my control.

    He told me Who sent him.
    That I had not Listened to others who came.
    Persons, creatures, plants, waters.
    Shells, stones, even soil, waiting for me.
    Each spoke in its language your message, Your name,

    Your winged messenger sang “don’t forget,
    This is not the world you belong to,
    But it offers the path to the Father Who waits.
    Accept all as His Will. ”Pain, illness mere shadows
    From the cross of His son. Follow these footsteps home.”

    The messenger flew off still singing
    “ Don’t forget, live in the world of the heart.
    Listen to the messengers.”
    _____________

  17. Jason Williams Avatar
    Jason Williams

    Dear Father
    I am an Englishman living in Japan for many years and started attending a local church several years ago. I started reading your posts and listening to your talks recently. It’s difficult to express how wonderful this has been. Japan is a typical example of a secular nation relying on ever more technology and having contact with your thoughts has allowed me to see how i have been unconsciously trying to shape being a Christian into a modern society.
    Moreover we are a family of three all struggling with various illnesses but you have provided a perspective where we are able to accept our situation more readily.
    Thank you for everything you do and for the technology that has allowed this!!
    Glory to God!

  18. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Jason,
    May God preserve you! And thanks for the note!

  19. Jp Esnouf Avatar
    Jp Esnouf

    Thank you Fr. Stephen,

    Someone once said the truth will first make you angry before it can set you free. I think it could be better phrased; The truth will first kill you before it sets you free.

    Its no easy thing living in this ‘modern’ world we have created.

    I was wondering how you would interpret “And from the days of John the Baptist until now, the kingdom of heaven suffereth violence, and the violent take it by force” (Matthew 11:12)?

  20. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Jp,
    It is something of a metaphor, isn’t it, inasmuch as the Kingdom of God and the created world have very different natures. The created order is changed by our use of violence (a furrow is plowed, a man is killed, etc.). The Kingdom of God, “suffering violence,” is not itself changed (it is eternal and does not change) but the one employing the “violence” is himself changed – he becomes like the Kingdom of God itself.

    As I noted earlier, Christians are not ideologues. It’s not that violence is somehow evil. It is its misuse and its unwise use that is problematic. Modernity, according to GK Chesterton, is “the virtues run wild” (or something to effect).

  21. Dee of St Herman Avatar
    Dee of St Herman

    Father,
    It seems those who have wrought violence tend to be ideologues. Especially it seems among Americans who call themselves Christians. I have trouble conceptualising a separation between the ideological and violence. Where there is violence there is typically some ideological purpose. Pease forgive my need for better understanding. I’m not able to see examples of the use of violence without some ideological purpose.

    So often I’ve heard some major catastrophe as an act of God for punishment of sinful people. I know that this is the Western version of the “angry god”. It is hard to place extreme catastrophes as a process for good. Yet I have an icon of St Olga that says God can make great beauty from complete desolation.

  22. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    Hello Dee.

    I am a bit confused myself. When the church ran things in Europe, there was a lot of violence and bloodshed. It was supposed to be a faith-based culture that was grounded in Jesus Christ, but it was violent. Were they simply ideologues run amok? Could the same happen again?

    I am not for one minute siding with the secularists, but they did seem to cool religious violence down in Europe so many centuries ago. They of course then became violent themselves. I love the Church, but I am not blind to its violent past. I am also aware of the horror of secular violence. It seems violence is part of the process of living in a broken world sadly. I just want to be like Christ.

    All that said, I know Eastern Orthodoxy does not share the same history as the Church in the west.

  23. Byron Avatar
    Byron

    Matthew,

    I tend to think that the Western Church was often taking part in a struggle for corporate power in a very divided Europe–something the Eastern Church did not typically take part in (as far as I can tell). A lot will depend on the [i]level[/i] of violence of which we speak. There has always been violence throughout the world on some level, and the Church is no outlier there.

    As my priest has stated, Orthodoxy has a confusing history with the use of violence. It may be that the Church, as a corporate entity, has not been involved in grand actions, but there are many instances of soldiers and monks being blessed to take part in war.

    Altogether, my own thoughts tend to simply acknowledge our failures (however they are seen) and do what we can in our own lives to avoid damaging others through violent acts, words, etc. I don’t mean to handwave it, but the history of violence may be a bit above my paygrade….

  24. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Dee,
    It’s very easy to turn our Christianity into an ideology, and in the name of the ideology do terrible things. I keep saying, “Keep the commandments.” The managing of the world in the name of Christ is a sure and certain way to destruction.

  25. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Matthew,
    “When the Church ran things…” it was one of many temptations. We have no commandment to be in charge of the world. How can the leaders of nations find the way to Christ when we abandon His commandments?

  26. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    Thanks so much Byron and Fr. Stephen.

    Byron, would it be fair to say that because the eastern Church was under so much persecution it didn´t have the ability to “run things” the way the Church ran things in the west? If we say yes that this is fair to say, then I´m wondering if such persecution in the east had not taken place would the eastern Church have taken the worldly bait the way the Church in the west did?

    Fr. Stephen said:

    “When the Church ran things…” it was one of many temptations. We have no commandment to be in charge of the world. How can the leaders of nations find the way to Christ when we abandon His commandments?”

    This is a very good question ….

  27. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Matthew,
    What might have happened under different circumstances is always impossible to know. Orthodoxy struggles with many things up to and including the present times.

  28. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    Thanks Fr. Stephen.

  29. Laurie Marvin Avatar
    Laurie Marvin

    Hi, Fr. Stephen. To play devils advocate, politics is part of the world we live in. Should the church or world speak to these situations? Slavery, inequality, war, the death penalty, abortion. I brought up Russia and its war in Ukraine. I notice that question was left unanswered. Its your blog and of course you have the right to control the conversation, but I was somewhat disappointed. In times of great moral difficulty, it seems as though some decisions must be made internally, even if one has little power over their ultimate outcomes.

  30. Laurie Marvin Avatar
    Laurie Marvin

    Sorry, that should say should the church speak to the world.*

  31. Bonnie Avatar
    Bonnie

    Here is further food for thought regarding acts of war.
    https://incommunion.org/2011/03/31/orthodox-perspectives-on-peace-war-and-violence/

  32. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Laurie,
    I generally have no comments to make about politics – other than to observe that it’s pretty corrupt and rarely self-describes accurately. Public moral discussions of issues (on the internet/social media) are pretty much useless exercises in the passions. Most people are not capable of having such discussions without being overwhelmed by the passions. Why should I tempt them?

    I am a priest of the OCA. The Church has clear positions on the matters you mentioned and I support the Holy Synod on all of them. You can look them up on the OCA’s website. But it is simply not the conversation that interests me in this venue. I have a different ministry that I have accepted and for which I’ve been blessed.

    When my blog was on Ancient Faith (which it no longer is), writers were specifically asked to refrain from political conversations or discussions of the war in Ukraine. I will say that, like many modern moral issues, there are layers of complexity that make it difficult to properly discuss or take a “one-size-fits-all” position.

    In matters such as these, I will, no doubt, disappoint many. I find it rather striking how little Christ had to say about the politics of Rome or Israel. I will also say that the corners of Orthodoxy (there are a number) where there is a lot of political speech leave me empty, often feeling sick. I do not find them to be “filled with the Spirit” nor to be making peace, regardless of their positions. In all honesty, I think that politics is haunted and dominated by demonic powers. I like to stay away from it.

    “Acquire the Spirit of peace and thousands around you will be saved.” St. Seraphim of Sarov

  33. Mark Spurlock Avatar
    Mark Spurlock

    Laurie,

    As someone who spent a substantial (and wasted) portion of his youth debating politics online, I very much appreciate Father Stephen’s position for this blog. If anyone seeks that debate, it’s easy enough to find.

    “Politics is part of the world we live in.” Hmm. So is celebrity. So are sports. I say this only because I do not see that the stated premise implies that the Church should express positions on who wins the Academy Awards or the NCAA tournament.

    For the specifics you list…”Slavery, inequality, war, the death penalty, abortion”…I think Christianity does have positions–as does Father Stephen. If, for example, you read the 10 points he lists above, you can likely guess what his positions are for each. And looking at point 8, one can infer how and where he would put his positions into practice.

    In Orthodoxy, the Church is often equated to a hospital. If you were being treated at a hospital for a medical condition, would you think it necessary that the hospital post a notice with its political positions in each patient’s room? Do you believe the hospital should not treat those with whom it disagrees politically?

    Some, indeed, might answer yes to both of those questions, but I believe that denotes them more as ideologues than followers of Christ.

  34. Laurie Marvin Avatar
    Laurie Marvin

    I largely agree with Fr Stephen. Arguing about politics often ends badly, and doesn’t change peoples minds. The temptations are many.

    But I can’t help feel that power is like money- that is, someone is going to wield it and it would be better if more or less decent people did. I do appreciate that here, unlike in some parts of the world, one still enjoys freedoms here that are not present elsewhere. People had to fight for those. I can’t see a way in this fallen world where good naturally triumphs without struggle. Politics, however imperfect, is sometimes that fight.

  35. Mark Spurlock Avatar
    Mark Spurlock

    Laurie,

    “I can’t help feel that power is like money- that is, someone is going to wield it and it would be better if more or less decent people did. ”

    This is Boromir’s mistake in Lord of the Rings, but if you prefer a more scriptural reference, please see Luke 4:5-8. Indeed, power is like money in that both are temptations.

  36. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Laurie,
    You said:

    But I can’t help feel that power is like money- that is, someone is going to wield it and it would be better if more or less decent people did. I do appreciate that here, unlike in some parts of the world, one still enjoys freedoms here that are not present elsewhere. People had to fight for those. I can’t see a way in this fallen world where good naturally triumphs without struggle. Politics, however imperfect, is sometimes that fight.

    I very much agree that power is like money. I would note that the “decent” people have very little of either. I disagree, however, with your thoughts on how good triumphs. I think that it is patently clear that the good works as a mystery in this world, particularly on the larger stage. It works very much as Joseph of Egypt said to his brothers: “You meant it to me for evil, but the Lord meant it to me for good.” Goodness is an attribute of God, it is His Divine Energies in the world. It sustains everything, despite the workings of evil people (or our own incompetence).

    It is simply the case that, at the very least, we lack sufficient information to actually know what’s going on, much less the thoughts and motivations of the hearts of those involved in the actions about which we read. I do not think there are any reliable (truly reliable) news sources. There are competing narratives, themselves, at best, a mixed bag of motives (including a desire for money and power).

    The theory of how politics works is a story we tell ourselves. It sounds good, even like it should work. But I believe it to be quite partial and largely untrue.

    I noted that Christ said almost nothing about Rome or Israel. It would have been a waste of breath. We, however, talk about these larger things as if we somehow had our hands on the levers of power. We do not. We have endured woefully incompetent rogues (and worse) lined up by each political party for years, imagining that voting for one or the other would turn the tide of history.

    The outcome of history is in the hands of God. The outcome can be seen in the death and resurrection of Christ. Christ gaves us commandments that are always right at hand that we might act and do the next good thing. I do vote, but I have no expectations attached to that vote. I know that the outcome of everything – including the next few minutes – is in the hands of God.

    Forgive me, but some of what you’re saying reminds me of Hobbes – who taught that everything is a struggle. He was also an atheist. I cannot find anywhere in the Fathers or in the faith where such a theory of history is taught. Good triumphs just like Pascha (and is always a Pascha when it does). We should do the next good thing, following the commandments of Christ. Voting is permitted, but we are commanded to pray. In the End, it all works out. In the meantime, we have been promised suffering. There should be no surprise about that. However, as we pray and give ourselves to God, we work at relieving the suffering of others around us.

    It remains true: Acquire the Spirit of peace and thousands around you will be saved.

    I understand that I am suggesting a rejection of the modern narrative that desperately believes in political action. I think that by cherry-picking history, people can support that narrative. However, it becomes just one more lie of the many we tell ourselves.

    Stanley Hauerwas, a prominent Protestant theologian, once said: “The project of modernity was to produce people who believe they should have no story except the story they choose when they had no story. Such a story is called a story of freedom – institutionalized economically as capitalism and politically as democracy. That story, and the institutions that embody it, is the enemy we must attack through Christian preaching.”

    It’s worth chewing on. I believe he pretty much got it right. It also suggests that Christian preaching is a dangerous thing. I have pondered his thoughts for over 3 decades now and found him to be quite insightful. I studied under him for several years. I have to admit that for the first three years I argued with him pretty vociferously. Inadvertently, he played an important role in my conversion to Orthodoxy. I say “inadvertently” because he had no intention of doing any such thing. But “the Lord meant it to me for good.”

    Such is life.

    Today, my household goods are being loaded on a truck and moved to S.C. and I am following. My access to my computer (and free time) will be quite spotty. But I pray that this note is at least worth chewing on, even if it’s not the last word.

    God is working us good – always and everywhere. Glory to Him for all things!

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