The Forgotten PhenomenonWhat would you say if I told you there is a concept in the Bible that would help us make better decisions in every area of our lives, personal and political, if we would but know about it and put its lessons into practice? Well, there is one, and we’ve often ignored it at our peril. Let me highlight this concept as it’s encountered in the Bible, then I’ll apply it in today’s world. In Luke Chapter 11, verses 24 through 26, we read the following: “When an evil spirit comes out of a man, it goes through arid places seeking rest and does not find it. Then it says, ‘I will return to the house I left.’ When it arrives, it finds the house swept clean and put in order. Then it goes and takes seven other spirits more wicked than itself, and they go in and live there. And the final condition of that man is worse than the first.” NIV Jesus of Nazareth was the greatest expert on human nature ever born. What he says here is that it is not enough to clean house and get rid of nefarious influences, there must also be a subsequent infilling. As he explains in this other teachings, this is because we are all slaves by nature. In spite of what we like to imagine, we lack the ability to chose aright and follow up with proper action. We are subject, no matter what we hope or say, to forces greater than ourselves. Thus, when our lives are “swept clean and put in order,” there will still be a power vacuum in our lives that invites greater powers in. The question is therefore not, am I dominated, but rather, what is it that dominates me? Is it a demon, or is it God? You will be controlled by somebody or something; the only thing we can choose is if that entity is benevolent or evil. As we shall see, this goes for individuals, as Jesus’ example depicts, as well as for groups of people, as we read about in the newspapers. Let’s see if this isn’t true. First, look at the individual behavior of those not explicitly Christian. What happens at AA meetings, where there is no mention of Jesus of Nazareth? First of all, hopefully everybody is sober. There is a demon of alcoholism, a spirit that derives worship when we bow down to the bottle and not to our Savior. Don’t believe this is true? Watch an alcoholic or any drug addict, and you’ll see that there is a supernatural, evil, and irrational dimension to their behavior that seeks their ultimate destruction. The creativity, the relentlessness, the sheer single-mindedness of their obsession with alcohol or drugs is full and sufficient testimony to the existence of personal, intelligent evil. So back to the meeting. Most of the time, there’s no alcohol, but what is there instead? Often it’s cigarettes and coffee, in excess. The people are still addicts, they still offer worship to, in the words of Pat Robertson, a different “vegetable.” They worship the tobacco plant and the coffee bean, not a fungus. This is no doubt an improvement, but the underlying dynamic is intact. Overt Christians are not exempt from the same pressures. Many Christians meet Jesus and rejoice in the forgiveness of sins he has already purchased for them. If they don’t fill themselves with fellowship and teaching, however, what usually happens? They fall away, as Jesus predicts when talking about the seed sown in shallow soil, and are lost. They realize they are forgiven, but they are not filled. Remember, we have two problems. One is guilt over past sins, and the other is powerlessness to stop sinning in the future. If you have the former but not the latter, you will become discouraged and subject to even greater condemnation for having known the truth and done nothing about it. Then, and more to the point in an election year, we see the same phenomenon in human behavior on a national scale. If I have one criticism to make of U.S. foreign policy over the past century, it is that we think other people are like us. We derive our ideals that forged our liberal capitalist democracy from our history as being subject to British common law. The ideals of common law were hammered out over the past millennium, and can be formally traced to the Magna Carta in 1215. We and other British colonies are unique in this heritage, yet we think everybody shares our democratic ideals. Not so. Even the French have a very different attitude towards law, government and the rights of man from the British. So what happens is this: we Americans go to the rescue of beleaguered people and deliver them from their oppressors. We have done this time and again, and the results of those ventures vary to the extent that we recognized the existence of a power vacuum after their deliverance. In cases where no vacuum was allowed, the transition and recovery were smooth. Witness Germany and Japan after WWII. The Marshall Plan, NATO and the presence of U.S. troops were sufficient to maintain order and allow an indigenous leadership to take hold. But what about when we allow a vacuum to develop without taking steps to fill it? Examples abound in the past 100 years. In approximate chronological order:
These examples are presented in a necessarily incomplete degree, yet the point remains: in national life as well as that of the individual, we cannot tolerate power vacuums. Evil never rests, and we are most susceptible to its incursions after we are relieved of oppression. If the void, whether personal or national, is not quickly filled with good, it will soon be filled with bad. The choice is not normal>whether or not it is filled, but with what it will be filled. A person sweeps and puts their life in order through repentance, and it follows they must in very short order be filled with the Holy Spirit if they are to gain power to succeed. A nation that tosses out the oppressive leader must also install a more benevolent regime, with all celerity, if their fate is not also to be “worse than the first.” Jesus knows us better than we know ourselves, and it behooves us to stick our noses in the Bible and save ourselves the peril of rediscovering these truths anew in each generation. Until we deal with our inherent powerlessness, both individual and collective, we’re just palliating symptoms and repeating life’s, and history’s, errors. |