I do not love my neighbor.
In fact, my interactions with my neighbors looks a little
more like this:
“For not only am I unable to lay down my life for his sake
(according to the gospel), but I do not even sacrifice my happiness, well-being,
and peace for the good of my neighbor. If I did love him as myself, as the
gospel bids, his misfortune would distress me also, his happiness would bring
delight to me too. But on the contrary, I listen to curious, unhappy stories
about my neighbor and I am not distressed; I remain quite undisturbed, or what
is worse still, I find a sort of pleasure in them…. His well-being, honor and
happiness do not delight me as my own…What is more, they subtly arouse in me
feelings of envy or contempt.” ThePilgrim Continues His Way
It’s a game that I’ve perfected: the comparison contest.
More often than not, when I look at someone I compare myself to how they
reflect on me. Am I prettier, smarter, more exciting? If I am, then my pride is
bolstered and I continue on my merry way. If I don't measure up, jealousy,
envy, and self-loathing take hold, gripped in green.
There’s something keeping me from connecting their
well-being with my own. Their victories with my own. I can only see darkly. I can only see me.
When I look at others, I see my own junk and problems and
preconceptions reflected back. The focus is on myself. Not what they're really
going through, not who they really are. Just who I've made them to be, someone
to pity or someone to envy, when compared against myself. That's dehumanizing.
That is not life-giving or loving. I've commodified them and myself. I've made
coming out on top of this shallow ranking the ultimate goal. Not real connection. Not love.
We all know the feeling to some extent. We all know the
strivings and grasping of our egos, our possessions, our time. The selfishness
that keeps us from loving our neighbors. The reason we need to have discussions
about what it means to be in solidarity with the poor. The reason, I believe,
we even have poor in this world.
A while ago I read an essay analyzing the
infamous-wedding-love passage in 1st Corinthians. You know the
verses I’m talking about, the clanging cymbals, love is patient, love is kind
one that ends with faith, hope, love, and “I do.”
In these verses, there is a chunk of text that talks about
the incompleteness of the love we experience now.
It says, “For now we see only a reflection as in a mirror;
then we shall see face to face. Now I know in part; then I shall know fully,
even as I am fully known.” 1 Corinthians 13: 11-12
I always thought this verse was about seeing God face to
face. Or seeing ourselves as we truly are—a reflection of God’s grace and love
and beauty.
But, as Madison Smartt Bell pointed out in his marvelous
essay, A Love Supreme in the book Joyful Noise, this is a passage about loving others. Love doesn’t happen in a vacuum.
These exhortations to serve in love, to prophecy in love, to teach in love are
for the benefit of our neighbors. We are called to be patient and kind and slow
to anger with EACH OTHER.
So why would this future face-to-face exclude our neighbors?
What if it’s our neighbors, not just God or ourselves, who we will one day see
so clearly?
"When a glass is perfectly transparent it does not
reflect at all; it leaves one openly face-to-face with those on the other
side." Madison Smartt Bell, Joyful Noise
Those on the other side are the people all around
us. The people we do a pretty lousy job at loving and sacrificing our
happiness, privacy, peace, time, money, or parking spaces for.
People say that humility is not thinking less of yourself
but thinking of yourself less. I believe that is what Paul is describing in 1
Corinthians 13. A love and attention that does not reflect back to ourselves.
One day we will see each other with God's eyes. We won't just see ourselves.
But right now, this hour, this minute, this life, I’m
trapped in it. This dark self-prison. These comparisons.
It gets worse with body image for me, but that's not it.
It's everything. Am I more athletic? Do I have a better sounding job? Did I
make a better joke? And all of this is going in my head instead of LISTENING to
whomever it is I'm talking to. It's sick. I am trapped in this prison of
myself.
But I want FREEDOM from this self-obsession. One of my
favorite quotes comes from Rumi, who says, "You become bewildered; then
suddenly Love comes saying, 'I will deliver you this instant from
yourself.'"
Love, deliver me from myself. I believe that is what you
promise, Jesus. Living water. Forgiveness. A place where strivings cease.
That is true salvation. Freedom and forgiveness of sins, but
also deliverance from ourselves.
Please open my eyes to others. Their hopes and dreams and
pain that is completely unrelated to me. Break the scale. The measurement. The
comparison. Be my true hope and portion.
For now we see only a reflection as in a mirror, gripped in
green; but one day we shall see face-to-face in His Kingdom, gripped with grace.
This is a struggle of my own as well. I attribute it to low self-esteem, but more than likely, as you point out here, it's a result of being TOO full of myself, not lacking esteem at all.
ReplyDeleteGreat post. Great thoughts. Great writing. Keep it up!