This entry will be brief. As we reflect upon the cross this
week I would like you to ponder this quote by Thomas Merton.
“Be anything you like. Be madmen, drunks, and bastards of
every shaped and form. But at all costs avoid one thing: Success.”
Thomas Merton was a monk.
Why would he say something like this? It’s crude, its
offensive to us, its so out of place for a nice peace loving monk. But although
I’d like to admit otherwise – I think he’s right. (Understand he's using irony here to prove his point so I'm in no way condoning being any of these things - please understand the point he is making.)
Our culture is driven by success. We want to be successful
so very much – we long for it because success gives us validity in other
people’s eyes – it gives us power and prestige. It propels us to be
“important.” It shows us how deeply unsatisfied we are with who we are.
More Twitter followers. More blog hits. More book sales.
Bigger churches. More money. Better office. Bigger house. Nicer car.
Why is this so bad?
Why would Mr. Merton be so against it?
Maybe because the more driven by success we become the more
we think about ourselves and the less we think about others. The drive to be
successful does some weird things to us – namely it makes us selfish and
self-centered. And the more we focus on ourselves the sicker we become.
I know I struggle with the desire to be successful. The
culture around me tells me to climb the ladder, to move on, to go to the next
thing. This is success it tells me.
But Jesus is telling me something different.
Jesus is telling me to die to myself and my dreams and
follow Him. To pour my life out on behalf of others – to invest in the lives of
the marginalized and powerless – to live simply so I can give more away. To be
content with who I truly am.
This week I’m reminded that Jesus rejected success. He could
have led a rebellion or been Caesar or had more Twitter followers than Lady
Gaga but he chose another way. This week I’m reminded that He died a
humiliating death as he hung naked and bleeding as a condemned criminal. I’m
reminded that Jesus understood the only way to bring life was through the door
of death and self-denial.
Jesus was so not successful. By all accounts he failed.
But then again…
#resurrectioniscoming
Maybe this is what Thomas Merton means…
No comments:
Post a Comment