Monday, May 25, 2020

706 - Outside the Box

Spirituality Column #706
May 26, 2020
Common Christianity / Uncommon Commentary

Outside the Box
By Bob Walters

“So we fix our eyes not on what is seen, but on what is unseen, since what is seen is temporary and what is not seen is eternal.” Paul, 2 Corinthians 4:18

“Now faith is confidence in what we hope for and assurance about what we do not see.” Hebrews 11:1

It wasn’t until I went inside a church that I truly learned about thinking outside the box.

Seems backwards, doesn’t it?  All those judgmental, close-minded Christians steeped in spooky fear and irrational legends “praying” into thin air about forgiveness, salvation, eternal life, and God’s glory.  Where is the logic in any of that?

Turns out that logic, so revered by “thinkers,” I discovered over time, is the box that incarcerates humanity and truly confines the human mind.  It is faith in these wonderful “things unseen” which, as C.S. Lewis put it, is the light by which we see everything else.  Faith in Christ is the most out-of-the-box thinking we can experience.

Logic is helpful and isn’t necessarily a “bad” thing; it simply is neither a very big intellectual box nor indicative of an assured moral guidepost.  Logic, on its own, provides situational awareness, objective analysis, workable action plans, and a pathway upon which opinion may safely trod but right-thinking and truth may stumble. 

Because a large part of modern culture insists logic cannot be argued with, logic accommodates the tyranny of popular clichés, partisan soundbites, and what 1900s Christian apologist G.K. Chesterton would call, “Truisms that are not true.” Intellectual heft, you see, requires great intellectual will and inspired intellectual energy. Not clichés.

Christianity is entirely an exercise in out-of-the-box thinking.

First evidence of that?  Nobody saw Jesus coming.  Despite prophecy and the despair of the Jews badly in need of and waiting for God’s promised Messiah, they saw nothing logical or attractive in a “savior” who was a servant and who taught the moral enormity of servanthood and obedience “even unto death.”  That’s outside the box.

Pick your Bible story – Old Testament or New – and you’ll find the true story of God, not much about the sanctified logic of humanity.  If anything, the Bible reveals that when man draws his mind within the small logical and often fearful, self-preservationist box of himself, evil frequently emanates.  Why?  He’s not thinking about God or others.

Twentieth century Jewish philosopher Hannah Arendt, who with her family escaped Nazi Germany, attended the post-war trial in Jerusalem of Holocaust architect Adolf Eichmann.  She expected to see a monster, but her lasting impression of him was the evident smallness of his ability to and absence of willingness to think.  That, Arendt surmised, was how he generated enormous evil out of his meek, “banal” personage.

In Christ – with mysterious but unwavering assuredness – we possess the cosmic enormity and power of thinking about God’s goodness, truth, and love.  The freedom of Christ is the freedom of thinking well outside the box of humanity’s confines.

Is our mind like Christ’s?  No.  But does Christ impart His mind to us?  Yes, that’s why He entered time and humanity: to teach, to share, to prove, to love, to serve.

It isn’t logical or in a box, but Jesus gifted us with a whole new way of thinking.

Walters (rlwcom@aol.com) sees the Bible more as a how-to-think book than a rulebook.

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