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Commentary: How to be really human
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Commentary: How to be really human

Published on Sunday, September 27, 2009Email To Friend    Print Version

By  Rev Nicholas Sykes

Perhaps if there is one classic Christian virtue that is out of step with the common thinking of today, it is humility. An interviewing preparation site on the Internet, for instance, which seems both typical and reasonable, suggests that an interviewee might prepare for questions such as “Why should we hire you? What can you do for us that someone else can’t?”

No points would be scored in the interview by a declaration that one had submitted to God and resisted the devil – even if that were actually true. Yet this submission to God is definitely a starting-off point so far as a live Christian faith is concerned. In the Epistle of St. James itself it is made very clear that a genuine and effectual belief in God is not even merely assent that He exists.

The doctrine of Christ teaches that humans are asked to submit to God’s authority. If we do not have that submission as a core property, the doctrine warns us that our humanity becomes distorted and falls further and further away from true humanity. The character of our submission to God’s authority is shown to us in its fullness in Jesus Christ.

If we are willing to submit to God’s authority, God our Father shows us the action of that submission in the life and work of the God-Man Jesus Christ, and, in addition, our Father has offered to us Jesus as our means of being offered to Him. We can say that this is the course on “How to be Really Human” that is not taught in today’s Western schools. Christian doctrine holds too that being submitted to God there is a proper place in our common life for being submitted one to another.

A submission to God implies a measure of submission to one another, a willed submission certainly and not just a constraint. We begin to see the difference between a community that is held together by willed ties of submission, and a community that is forced into being held together by the operation of overwhelming power. The one is a more human society than the other, and the starting-off point for it is our submission to God by the gracious means He has offered.

Jeremiah chap 11 verses 18-20 illustrates the “How to be Really Human” course in the context of Jeremiah’s life. He tells of a plot being made against his life, that at first he was unaware of. “I was like a gentle lamb led to the slaughter,” he says. No doubt it was because of the unpopular prophetic truths he was offering them.

Jeremiah might like to see that vengeance made visible, but the important thing is that he is submitted to God about the matter. What a person feels is of little consequence so long as his will is submitted to God. It is out of that submission that Jeremiah could find healing, whether he saw God’s vengeance at work or not.

We will rely on God to put things right one way or another when we are submitted to Him, and this will heal and stabilise us and the communities that we will affect. But if there is no submission to God we will try to take vengeance ourselves on whoever we may conclude has planned something against us.

This will bring about either a litigious or a lawless society, or one that is infiltrated by plotters of disaster. Do we not see this only too evidently at the present time?

St. Mark chap 9 verses 30-37 demonstrates the stark contrast between the mind and wisdom of Christ, that is to say one that is wholly submitted to God, and the unsubmitted human mind and wisdom that has started to become distorted and devilishly inhuman. The mind of Christ is seen in Jesus’ concerns here, while the unsubmitted human mind is seen in the concerns of the disciples.

Jesus’ mind, which He wants once again to share with His disciples, is that His submitted life is very shortly to be taken through a path of deliverance into malign hands, condemnation and death on the cross, and then resurrection. This will have a profound effect upon the disciples and they ought to be prepared for what is about to happen. But the disciples’ concerns at this time, on the other hand, show how deeply unprepared they still are.

When Jesus asked them what they had been discussing on the road, they hesitated to own up to the nature of their concerns - that they had been discussing which of them was the greatest. So Jesus showed them that if a child is received in Christ’s name, Christ Himself is received. Like a child submitted to parental authority, Jesus Himself is shortly to be received into heaven, submitted to His Father; let them too, then, be submitted like a child!

At this point the disciples were failing the course on “How to be Really Human” even having the greatest of teachers, and we can see that after 2000 years of the same course taught by the Holy Spirit of God our western world seems to be on the brink of failure, and we in the Church often register failing grades as well. Let’s listen to the teachers of the course again.

If we are not in submission to God by the means that Jesus offers, human society becomes disordered and compulsive and our humanity itself becomes devilishly inhuman; but in the words of St. James, “Submit yourselves to God. Resist the devil, and he will flee from you.”

For commentary, information and devotional material see www.churchofenglandcayman.com and www.anglicansatprayer.org

 
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