“Though the rich man with greed
heaps up from ever-flowing streams
the wealth that cannot satisfy,
though he deck himself with pearls from
the Red Sea's shore,
and plough his fertile field with oxen
by the score,
yet gnawing care will never in his
lifetime leave him,
and at his death his wealth will not go
with him,
but leave him faithlessly.”
—from
Book 3, Poem 3
Now most
people I know will tell me that they have always understood such a claim, which
is why I scratch my head when most people also live in exactly the contrary
way. Where is the obstacle to putting the theory into practice, or is it
perhaps simply a matter of mouthing certain words that we don’t really believe
in? Where is the disconnect between our thinking and our living?
We will
all proceed in our own distinct ways, so there can be no blanket statements
here. Yet I see my fellows, and while a certain bunch are just liars, plain and
simple, others are sincerely confused.
It
becomes no better when a conscience is constantly in struggle with the
pressures of the world. The conflict is, in my own experience, the deepest and
most critical within everything I see around me. Shall I define myself by who I
truly am within myself, or by what I think I possess outside of myself?
I was
raised as a Roman Catholic, thankfully in a manner that stressed love over
conformity, willing commitment over blind rules, but in the many years I have
heard people preach to me about the riches of spirit over the riches of money,
I see them doing the complete opposite.
My wife
and I have worked for the Church, in one way or another, directly or
indirectly, for most of our adult lives. We worry that we are being too
cynical, but we always seem to return to the recognition that far too many
people who say they are “Christian” are concerned with something quite
different. God and neighbor, religion and morality, are for them a means to the
end of worldly convenience and profit.
I could
write a whole book, quite a long one at that, about all our experiences, and
how these experiences made us question ourselves. It would be quite a dreary
book, however, and while those who already choose to know would have no need to
read it, those who choose not to know would never even bother with it.
The only
way I can explain the obstacle, and only from my own thinking, is based on two
aspects.
First,
we tend to love what is more immediate over what is more ultimate. I think it
will make me feel better now instead of later, and I think it is better because
it tugs at the brutal power of my gut, instead of the subtle power of my
understanding.
Second,
we tend to learn that we can get away with lying, both to others and to
ourselves. I see others do it all the time, and they seem to succeed. So why shouldn’t
I do the same? Lies end up being quite cheap.
I will
often put on one face for the world, even as I am despondent inside. My
disconnect comes from somehow believing that the former can smother the latter.
Yet what I proudly say is mine, is hardly mine at all.
Written in 9/2015
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