Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Devil's Graffiti

One of my favourite authors is, no, my favourite author is, Adrian Plass. His ability to communicate deep truth, often through humour is, I think, unmatched. Some write-off his books as silly humour and miss the true depth (in my view). His ability to entertain is of course worthy in and of itself but most of the time it is a means-to-an-ends. To communicate something more profound about God's love. He is also a good and skilled theologian but perhaps not in the traditional sense. And for me that is the key to his authenticity. Theology is important as it's about the truth of God but it is not what disciples of Jesus are called to - we are called to be disciples. Theology that does not change how we live is worthless. Plass's writing expresses the reality of a relationship and not just dry academic study. What you might call practical theology. Ultimately for a true disciple, no other kind is worthy of any consideration. 

Plass wrote some years ago about The Devil's Graffiti, drawing on Jeremiah 31 where God declares that he will write His laws on our hearts. A little bit of theological work is probably needed here to understand what this means. Certainly I think it a mistake to see it legalistically. Good laws increase freedom and I believe what Jeremiah 31 is saying is that God would change cold hearts such that external laws become less and less important. Plass's observation was that sometimes before God can begin to write said laws he first has to scrub away to remove the Devil's Graffiti that's in the way.


The problem, assuming your heart is anything like mine, is that negative graffiti has built up over the years leaving very little space for anything else. The devil gets busy with his infernal aerosol can! Things people have said, failures that have destroyed confidence, traumatic experiences, profound, unforgettable embarrassments – all sorts of things.
Usually each one tells you a lie about yourself:
you will never succeed,
you are not lovable,
God has cast you aside because of that sin,
you’re boring,
happiness is impossible,
your life has no purpose.
The almost invariable untruthfulness of these scrawling should be sufficient indication of their ultimate authorship. The father of lies is anxious that our hearts be covered with a confused mass of misinformation, some of it etched so deeply it comes close to breaking our hearts.
 
I have written elsewhere, in a different context about the poisonousness of lies. I don't think you have to believe in the spiritual interpretation to see the truth of the observation. Most people carry with them deep scars and things that have been burned into them that aren't true. This is of course, most profound in people who suffered in childhood - particularly from abuse but it is also true that some of us accumulate it over the years through constant knock-backs or repeated messages from the world around us. These lies - for that is what they are - are often deeply poisonous, affecting relationships, confidence and hope.

My own personal graffiti - well there's probably a few bits - but the most important one said simply this; "You are unlovable." I can chart particular experiences that are probably the origin of these words but it doesn't really matter. These words, scarred into me, often made liars of good people - for it didn't matter how much people expressed their love, it just wasn't actually possible for people to love me. It's not that I doubted them, I doubted me.

I believe in a God of healing. These words are faded now - God has spent a long time scrubbing away to remove them. In fact they're not visible most of the time; it's only when the rain falls in a certain way that you can see them at all.

I have seen in the lives of many people the poison of such lies. I think recognising them for what they are is the first step to ridding ourselves of them, the first part of the healing the process.

AFZ

Sunday, December 09, 2012

Hippos...

Back in the day, when I was growing up, Crusaders produced yearly posters. These posters consisted of a bible verse with an illustrative image. The one I remember most vividly quoted 1 Samuel 16; "Man looks at the outward appearance but God looks at the heart." The image to accompany this verse was a hippopotamus. Presumably because this is an image of ugliness.

For reasons lost in the midst of time (and probably best left there) this became in family-lore "Man looks at the outward appearance but God looks at the hippo..." Now this silliness serves a purpose in that it makes the verse very memorable to me.

Then, when I (kinda) grew up I went to medical school and learnt anatomy. I learnt that there is a part of the brain (well, technically 2 of them) called the hippocampus. Now the hippocampus is part of the limbic system. It is somewhat questionable that the seat of the aphoristic human heart has any anatomical location but if it does, then it is the limbic system for this is the part of the brain responsible for emotions and instincts. So it turns out, worryingly that I was right all along, man does indeed look at the outward appearance and God looks at the hippo...(campus).

All of this extreme silliness is indeed going somewhere. Martin Luther King said that he dreamt of a world in which a child was judged not on the colour of their skin but on the content of their character. And whilst, in many aspects of life, racism itself is not tolerated, different kinds of superficiality still prevail. God however is much more concerned about what goes on in the heart (or limbic system if you prefer). In Matthew 23 Jesus expounds on this inside-out holiness. Get the heart right and the rest of life will follow.

AFZ