Jeremiah And The Cisterns
29th August 2010
Alienation
‘Alienation is the precise and correctly applied word for describing the major social problem in Britain today. People feel alienated by society. In some intellectual circles it is treated almost as a new phenomenon. It has, however, been with us for years. What I believe is true is that today it is more widespread, more pervasive than ever before. Let me right at the outset define what I mean by alienation. It is the cry of men who feel themselves the victims of blind economic forces beyond their control. It’s the frustration of ordinary people excluded from the processes of decision-making. The feeling of despair and hopelessness that pervades people who feel with justification that they have no real say in shaping or determining their own destinies.
Many may not have rationalised it. May not even understand, may not be able to articulate it. But they feel it. It therefore conditions and colours their social attitudes. Alienation expresses itself in different ways in different people. It is to be found in what our courts often describe as the criminal antisocial behaviour of a section of the community. It is expressed by those young people who want to opt out of society, by drop-outs, the so-called maladjusted, those who seek to escape permanently from the reality of society through intoxicants and narcotics. Of course, it would be wrong to say it was the sole reason for these things. But it is a much greater factor in all of them than is generally recognised.
So spoke Jimmy Reid, in his Rectorial address to Glasgow University in 1973.
Jeremiah
Many many years, back in the dusts of an ancient civilisation
In a time where people spoke strange languages
In a spot that is still there,
A prophet stood and he shouted out words, to describe the alienation of his people
I don’t know how he came upon these words
It may have been something of a trance
Or it may have been that in his own creative gifts he assembled the words
And the Spirit of God confirmed within him that he had found the truth.
Anyway, he spoke of the same things as Jimmy Reid had in 1973 during his address as Rector.
Something is broken
Something has dulled us
Something is empty
Jeremiah went further than Jimmy Reid
He went beneath the social degradation
The violence
The unjust taxation
He went beneath that and discerned a community
Which had lost its umbilical connection with the mother who had birthed it
A wife who was no longer on speaking terms with her husband
A relationship that broken in its most fundamental degree.
And the prophet stood on that dusty street, and he said his words
And they have echoed down through the ages,
Even as far as our gathering this morning.
Never Introduced
There was once an atheist (I think it was George Bernard Shaw, but struggled to find the quote) who was once asked why he did not believe in God, and he answered “We have never been properly introduced”.
There is a tendency to think that our alienation from God is kind of God’s fault,
His fault for lack of clarity.
I was reading on Facebook this week someone talking about faith.
I take comfort in science and the quantifiable evidence it can provide as opposed the blind faith of religion. Others feel the opposite and neither is fundamentally right or wrong as we will never be able to disprove religion though religion can, in theory, be proved. (All it would take is for God to pop by for a visit. )
I believe that Jimmy Reid and Jeremiah and that guy in Facebook were all describing a similar thing, this alienation. This sense that God is not here.
But where Jeremiah takes us in a different direction, is that he insists the problem is not a logical one, it is not a question of finding the best argument,
It is down to a moral flaw in us.
They are both in verse 13,
We have forsaken God, the fountain of living waters
And hewed out cisterns for themselves, broken cisterns that hold no water.
Wanting Away
It is a stunning charge for us to hear, for the people of God
“You have forsaken God”
There is a part of us, that wants to be away from where we are now
There is a malicious discontentment
It runs away from the present moment – we move fast
It wants out of the constraints of living – we drink much, we eat much, we get our highs
It wants away from responsibility , from ownership, from being needed.
It is the pain of living, and we want away.
Now this is not the same as wanting to things around us to become more
It is being fundamentally dissatisfied with who we are and where we are, even though it is the right place for us to be.
It is like those strange Michael Jackson impersonators you get on the X-Factor, unable to live with who they are called to be, they become a grotesque, frightening impersonation of someone else.
Ultimately this is rejecting of the kindness of God,
That God alone cannot be left to the job of keeping us and guiding us.
We need another agent, we need to take control, we forsake God.
And when we forsake God, we run away to other Gods.
Going To Other Gods
The second charge is this
Not just that we abandoned God, but that we went after other Gods.
There was an offer of water, and instead of taking it,
We said, I will collect water for myself, the cistern may be broken
But I want that water.
I have a friend who whenever he or someone he knows is tempted to look at another woman, he says “Drink water from your own cistern”
In verse 11, it says “Has a nation ever changed its gods”
One writer has suggested that other nations would never want to change their gods,
Why would they want to do such a thing, because when your gods are undemanding, why would you want to leave them, but the God of Jacob, Isaac, the God of Jesus, he calls and summons us to something big.
“But the grace which gave much asked much; it demanded self-surrender. And without self surrender on the part of those who received it, grace became an empty word. No other nation changed its god, non-entity though that was. Israel forsook Yahweh because the relation to Him was full of ethical content… Yahwism had this iron core on it. The iron core was that Israel could only have Yahweh on his own terms. Yahwehism was no colourless faith, it laid a curb on men, it had a yoke and bonds. The bonds were those of love, but love’s bonds are the most enduring and the most exacting.” Adam C. Welch
Other gods
The ancient gods of Romans and Greeks,
Venus, the God of love
Mars, the God of war
Exist today in more subtle forms
Venus the God of love, the God of lust, the god that persuades us that joy is the perfect physical form unveiled for us –
Mars the God of war, the god that convinces us that fulfilment lies in conquest, in victory, in ascending in power above other mortals, the god of promotion
Sophia, the goddess of wisdom, of knowledge
Dyonisius, the god of pleasure
Hestia – the god of the home, quite literally the domestic goddess
Hera, the goddess of marriage, women and childbirth
Aphrodite, the goddess of beauty
Of people who worship these gods, the Bible through Jeremiah says:
“went after Worthlessness and became worthlessness”.
And then there is the god of the self:
Even sometimes we wish to install ourselves as God, as shapers of our own destinies. I sometimes draw back from rhetoric that says “You can be whoever you want to be” – no you can’t. We are frail, limited creatures. The only people who say these things are the winners of talent contests, not the 20,000 people who didn’t even get to boot camp; and even the winner of the talent contest will stop saying it three years down the line when they have lost their record deal.
I was listening to Boyd Hilton the TV critic (who writes the TV reviews for Heat) saying that his favourite form of comedy at the moment is “atheist anti-religion humour”. Eddie Izzard, Ricky Gervais, Robin Ince all have major sections of their acts which are dismissive or religion. Stephen Fry, who I really love, has been dismissive of religion also.
And I do wonder if what is behind these people striving for their to be no god, is not a careful reasoning of the arguments but a need for self to be God.
Alienation
Jeremiah probes beneath our alienation, our frustration at the hidden god,
And says “Let us first face your abandonment, your chasing after other gods.”
And the antidote to this abandonment of God, and running after other gods
Is to ask a question
It is a question that appears in verse 6, and verse 8
It is to honestly ask the question “Where is the Lord?”
In alienation, the response is not to try and try and manufacture faith for ourselves
It is to honestly ask the question “Where is the Lord?”
This has spoken to me a lot this week.
Because for a while now I too have been carrying this sense of alienation.
It is wrong to imagine that people like me have this kind of hotline to God.
And I have been trying to ask the question “Where is the Lord?”
There is a perception sometimes that questions are the enemy of faith.
There is a scene in a film called Cinema Paradiso, set in 1950s Sicily, where the hero Toto is in Church, spots the woman he loves, Elena, arrive at the confession box to make confession, this woman is phenomenally beautiful and Toto needs to be with her, he needs just the chance to talk to her. So he has an idea, he will rush into the priests portion of the confession box; but he needs to distract the Priest, so he enlists the help of his friend, an old man called Alfredo.
This is how Alfredo distracts the Priest:
“Father Adelfio” he says “I have a very serious doubt that is torturing my soul. And you’ve got to help me, because I’ve lost all peace of mind”
We cut back to Toto, talking to Elena, and then back to the priest Father Adelfio and Alfred,
And the Priest is distraught, crossing himself, almost whimpering, and the scale of Alfredo’s doubts, and what are these non-permissable doubts
“I know, but the miracle of the loaves and fishes, for example I think about it a lot, how is it possible…”
And the Priest continues to be appalled.
And this plays into a serious conception about religion. It is the job of the people to have ordinary lives, with ordinary doubts; and the it is the job of the priest to be certain, and to police the people so that they have no doubts, it is their job to wander about with their hotline to god, and their comfortable certitude; whilst everyone else asks questions. And even the smallest of questions, what about the loaves and fishes, is a grave sin.
It’s not like that. I too am plagued from time to time with doubts.
Sometimes fearful that I have made the right career choice.
That haunting alienation from others and from God.
The exact thing I must do is ask questions.
I can resonate with the experience of the improbably named Revered Adam Smallbone. Vicar of St. Saviours in the Marshes in the TV series Rev.
The end of the last episode of the series was about his alienation and disintegration
He is at a party where his bitterness with life,
His sense of failure in ministry
His alienation from the sense of God
Erupts in a furious argument with his wife
He drunkenly makes a pass at the local primary school headmistress
And when walking home, having been told to leave, tries to pick a fight with a local gang
Before being picked up by the police.
The police though do not take him to the cells but to a local high rise flat,
Where high up, on what looks like the fifteenth floor, they need Adam to visit a man who is dying of cancer.
No one else they sense is qualified to deal with this man’s deepest need
Because beyond his physical pain is the need to resolve his alienation from God
And so Adam administers bread and wine
And in this profound act, a drunken disillusioned priest, a dying man
Bread and wine
God becomes present.
And Adam is summoned back to himself
Away from his lustful pathetic wanderings,
And his false gods of drink and of lust and of self
Called back to God
I thought about this a lot this week when I too
Struggling with my own sense of alienation
Met with a man who is very ill
And as he lay in his bed, my alienation felt all the more acute, my questions thundered through my head
And just as they reached the crescendo this man lying there said
“I’ve no stopped believing, I’m ready to meet my maker”
Our sense of alienation is met in a resolve to return
To ask the question “Where is the Lord?”
Do you feel alienated, empty, distanced,
Have you had your share of the worthlessness and false promises of nothing gods
Then make your return.
Jesus, the dying man who at the last cried it is finished, and gave up his spirit to God
Loves all his children with unbreakable love
Turn to him
His arms are wide
And his burden is light.
AMEN
Idolatry
Jeremiah
Jeremiah 4
See All Tags
Add New Tag...
|