Matthew 22:34-46
Proper 25 / Year A
Confucius observed
life is simple, but we insist on making it complicated. Tax forms and outlet mall parking lots are
just two examples. It just seems we
humans are wired to make life more challenging.
Social theorists have identified something they call a “complexity
bias”, which is our tendency to focus on the 10% of a problem or situation that
is difficult, while ignoring the 90% that is doable. On their blog site. Marc and Angel Chernoff,
authors and life coaches, identify twenty things many of us do to make our
lives way more complicated than they need to be:
· We try to do too
much
· We try to control
too much
· We lose our
patience and our poise
· We respond with negativity
· We seek constant
validation from others
· We spend too much
time with toxic people
· We let the haters
get to us
· We feed into the
drama
· We worry constantly
about our problems
· We hold on to
tight, to everything
· We hesitate every
step of the way
· We focus on every
time and place other than right here, right now
· We try to cut
corners
· We avoid the tough
and necessary conversations
· We lose track of
our priorities
· We procrastinate
· We have far more
baggage than we need
· We let old mistakes
live on in our hearts and minds
· We give up on
ourselves too soon
· We compare
ourselves to others who seem better off
If more than a few
of these seem to describe you, chances are good you are making your life more complicated
than it needs to be.
To be sure,
religion is not immune to complexity bias.
There are 613 different commands in the Law of Moses. That is a lot. The number of corollaries emerging from them
over the years becomes astronomical and oppressive by Jesus’ day. A website by Christian Assemblies
International states there are 1,050 commandments in the New Testament (most
are statements in the imperative) and breaks them down into 69 categories with
headings like…
· 7 things to abstain
from
· 7 things to avoid
· 3 things to ask for
· 2 things to awake
to
· 74 “be’s”
· 30 “be not’s”
· 14 “beware’s”
· 3 things to cast
away
· 6 things to honor
I could go on (and
on and on and on), but you get the idea.
Just as with life, there is a pull to make religion more complicated
than it needs to be. It is so refreshing
and freeing to hear Jesus distill all of it down to two basic commandments:
Love God and Love your neighbor. As one
theologian observed, everything else in the bible after this is merely
commentary.
“Love the Lord your
God with all you heart, with all your soul, and with all your mind.” What does this look like in practice? Well, it certainly is not love as in a
teenage crush. It manifests itself
through adoration, worship, honoring, and obeying. “Love your neighbor as yourself.” What does this look like in practice? In part, it has something to do with valuing
every person as much as you value yourself.
How do I want to be treated? This
is how I am to treat other people. Want
to I need from others? This is what I am
to offer. How do I want my dignity to be
affirmed? This is how I am to respond to
every person I know and every person I meet and every person who is influenced
by my actions.
Wendall Berry, the
poet and farmer, rephrased the Golden Rule in this way: “Treat the people
downstream the way you want the people upstream to treat you.” That is a wonderful image for want it means
to love your neighbor as yourself.
I read an
interesting article this week by Joan Cook on the subject of post-traumatic
growth. Cook is an associate professor
of psychiatry at Yale School of Medicine and in the article she describes the
realities making hyper-stress the normative experience in our society today:
the pandemic, the coarse and corrosive political climate, natural disasters
associated with climate change, and on and on.
Cook details the adverse affects these things can have both on
individuals as well as our society as a whole, but notes “trauma can also
positively transform people and leave them with a renewed, reinvigorated perspective
on and purpose in life.”
Writing about a
1990 study of middle-aged adults going through bereavement, Cook says positive
changes emanating from post-traumatic growth can include “improved relationships,
more empathetic feelings and compassionate behaviors, additional coping
strengths or mastery muscles, living more in line with one’s values and an
increased connection to spirituality or God, as well as a deeper, sweeter
appreciation of life.”
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