Monday, August 30, 2010

Academia Sighs as the World Goes to Hell

This is the way the world ends
Not with a bang but a whimper.
-T.S. Elliot
they firmly believe that all of the world’s problems can be solved through “awareness.”  Meaning the process of making other people aware of problems, and then magically someone else like the government will fix it. 
-Christian Lander
On sunday, I went to church and the guest speaker was the president of International Justice Mission, an organization that does work against sex trafficking and other cases of slavery all across the world.  As most non-profit workers do, he told a rousing sermon.  Stories were told, pictures were shown, tears were shed, and shouts of passion rose up in the audience as he recounted the stories of the downtrodden, successful or unsuccessful.

By the end of the service, the musicians were on stage, leading the whole congregation in a chorus to the Almighty: "I will go!  I will go!"  Their words echoed in my head, but they felt more like a dirge.  As the people shuffled out of the room to their lives, the painful fact become apparent: statistically, about 95% of the room just told a brazen lie.

Unfortunately for us, the privileged middle children of human history, detached from wars and suffering and lulled to apathy by the static of the television, most of us will go back to our lives in monoliths of human invention, totally unaware of the horror going on around us.  We can hardly be blamed, can we?  The bitter sweet taste of prosperity is that it will ultimately make all humans numb and ignorant to the great injustices of our time, while at the same time making us unable to bear the slightest bit of pain or suffering.  In a book by Dr. Paul Brand, a famous leprosy doctor, he ranked the people of the United States as having one of the lowest pain tolerances and thresholds in the whole world.  Instead of being able to take pain in stride and as a natural part of life, Americans avoid pain at all costs, even to the point of theorizing that pain is so terrible that God could not exist.

As Tyler Durden said, "you'll never believe what people will do to avoid a fight." 

In my current situation, the most painful reminder of our numbness is the university.  We sit in great big stone buildings and learn about saving the world, and somehow get it into our heads that all problems will be solved in giant General Assembly chambers, or in the basements of faculty office buildings, or big think tanks, or, as a white guy once said, simple "awareness."  The sufferings of people become pawns in the hands of white men in suits, or strongly lettered words on the sign of a disgruntled university students, just dying to make a difference.  Not a tear will be shed for any of them, no more than anyone is going to cry over a math problem with no solution.  And when we finally see them face to face, its likely that we will think we already know the solution to their problems, even before they do.  Academia will sigh sympathetically while the world goes to hell.

I will not be so arrogant to suggest that I am at some sort of higher understanding, and that I will not be among the sighers when the masses are suffering.  Only I want to reflect how maybe our society, both academia and all other parts, have become numbed by prosperity into never feeling pain, and perhaps never being able to empathize.  When is the last time you've seen someone cry over a news report of a shooting?  Or seen someone be stirred by a sermon and, like the parable characters of old, will sell all he has to find the truth?  When will we make the connection between the problems we study and the emotions that should accompany them?

Right now, I guess all I can do is cry.  It doesnt do any good, because tomorrow I will wake up, and ill still be spending 50,000 to spectate the horrifying things happening around the world, and not have the resources to do anything about it.  Am I part of the problem?  Are we all part of the problem?

Maybe someday it will be worth it.  At least I hope so

~Jared

5 comments:

Barbara Mills said...

Try reading Jacques Ellul.

Unknown said...

Someday it will be worth it... in time. In the meanwhile, the waiting and the crying and the yearning to do something more is a killer.. isn't it?

Unknown said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Unknown said...

The same passion has often been ignited in me and has motivated me to express very confrontational and challenging words before church audiences when I have had opportunities - words that fall on dull ears i suppose. Ultimately though we are only expressing our "awareness" for the purpose of making others "aware" and as you are pointing out we are really doing little or nothing to actually help these problems that arouse our emotions. Especially when we Americans are so conditioned to hype that we are unmoved by a genuine call for compassionate action. Yeshua addressed the same problem I believe when he said "if you are not for me, you are against me." To me this statement acknowledges the reality of a sort of spiritual entropy that necessitates counteraction if anything of real significance is to be accomplished - in which case to DO nothing is to be part of the problem. I am so sick of doing nothing. What are we going to DO Jared?
Russ

danielg said...

The immensity of the ills of the world and our own limited resources and compassion are a reality that even Jesus acknolowledged

"the poor you will have with you always"

No one person can take in the world's sorrows or eradicate them.

But rather than being overwhelmed by the problem or our own lack of compassion and zeal to fix them, let us rely on these ideas, imho:

1. We can all do something, and with that, we should cease to beat ourselves for not doing more or all.

2. If we are Christians, we are *growing* in compassion, and have an inner resource that promises an ultimate transformation into the saint we wish we were.

3. God's will *is* accomplishable for us, even if poverty and sickness remain when we are done.

4. This life is one of mourning, not all joys if we decide to enter into the life of love.

5. In the end, God promises to right all wrongs and create a new kingdom, which we can announce now.

That should not lead us to inactivity, but to activity - and our faith should help us forgive and overcome our obvious frailties and have hope.