The Book of Proverbs may be one of the most
accessible books of the Bible insomuch as it speaks of the general wisdom and
common, practical knowledge that is readily available to all peoples and all
cultures at all times and places, as opposed to the specific and special
revelation that came more directly from God to Israel through the prophets.
The Proverbs are proverbial. They are simple and concrete sayings, popularly
known and repeated, that express general truths based on common sense or the
practical experience of all humanity.
They are not special to the Bible and many of
them can be found in the wisdom teachings of all cultures. Indeed, other
Ancient Near Eastern cultural literature, such as that of the Egyptians and the
Assyrians, contain proverbs like those found in the wisdom literature of the
Israelites. This should not surprise us. One does not have to be a follower of
Yahweh to know that adultery (5:3-4), lying (12:17-20; 19:9), drunkenness
(20:1), jealousy (6:34), pride (11:2), gossip (20:19) causes problems in one’s
life. You do not need to be a Christian to comprehend the benefits of
friendship (27:10), respecting parents (6:20; 15:5), and raising children
properly (22:6). Such ideas are endemic to human experience because they have
been generally found to be true amongst all people, in all places, and at all
times.
And for thousands of years amongst every
culture, when one fell foul of these general truths, there were typically two
cognitive responses:
1)
Either recognize your error and choose whether or not to adapt your
actions
2)
Or consider the whole issue a matter of fate/chance
Post-modern culture has thrown us a third
option in which culture and society have quickly embraced as they continue to abandon
Judeo-Christian morality.
Today when individuals commit selfish,
prideful, indolent, and sexual errors in their lives that result in the
inevitable, harmful outcomes, they are all too quick to blame what they
consider to be social construction and artificially moral codes that are
institutionally endemic. The idea here is that, in truth, in reality, there is
no moral truth that everyone should prescribe to, only variable, personal
social habits dependent upon the individual. But how is it then that there
seems to be an apparent moral cause and effect relationship between violations of,
say, sexual moral codes and the problems that inevitably follow? The
contemporary answer to this vexing question is the belief that society and
culture have been constructed over hundreds and even thousands of years so that
the followers of a particular moral code are privileged while those who reject
that moral code are disadvantaged. In this view, there is nothing absolute
about morality that reflects genuine reality; only the social construction of
the powerful imposing their morality upon the powerless. Thus, what has been
deemed sexual immorality only leads to disaster, heart break, disease, suicide,
destroyed relationships, jealousy, tears, poverty, depression, etc. because
powerful people of a particular moral code have constructed all of society to
make it so. Thus, the negative results of immorality are the fault of society
and the not the individual who violates that moral code. Thus, those who
promote that moral code as an absolute morality are partially culpable for the
disasters that effect moral violators.
This is the contemporary thinking of too many
in our culture today. Why do criminality and poor choices lead to poverty?
Society is to blame! Why can’t I commit crimes and attack police officers?
Institutional injustice! We’re even at the point where biological
facts are deemed social constructions and not accurate reflections of
scientific reality.
This is not to say that the structures of government,
culture, and society cannot be the conduits of evil and negative outcomes. Paul
of Tarsus speaks about this (Ephesians 6:12). Certainly, Socialism, Communism,
Fascism, Marxism, Nazism, and Progressive Liberalism have all shown to be
capable of creating structures which cause massive evil and tremendous
casualties in society. However, such power structures are shown to be evil
because they support, condone, and perpetuate the immorality that transgresses
the codes found in the Proverbs and elsewhere.
Yes, it is the height of hubris to suppose that the
proverbial morality found in every culture, at every time, and every place is
now to be willfully abandoned in order to assuage the guilt of individuals
frustrated by the fact that their moral choices lead to disastrous outcomes.
So what are we to do? How do we address this hard-headed
refusal to recognize reality?
Intellectual argument and rational thought won’t work. The
immorally defiant are neither intellectual nor rational. You can’t persuade
those who refuse to be open to persuasion.
Instead, I submit that we continue to be the light of the
world, the city on a hill, the salt of the earth. Clichés, yes, I know, but
they are the purpose and mission of the people of God. We need to be true, authentic
humans, living like mirrors reflecting the image and light of God in this
world. We must continue behaving morally and lovingly, following the proverbs
and commandments, and proclaiming the Gospel of the Kingdom of God. When people
see our faithfulness and love, a portion will be come. The rest will continue
in their self-imposed misery until God gives them over.
1 comment:
Great Bolg Taj Mahal Tour
Post a Comment