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2/26/2013

NOT EVEN A MEANS 



GOAFS II: #31
THE PRESENCE OF THE KINGDOM: 18
Chapter 3, the end and the means
FEBRUARY 27, 2013


Give a man a fish and he will eat for a day. Teach a man to fish and he will sit in a boat all day drinking beer.
Murphy’s Other 15 Laws, #12

A majority of Americans live in homes now applying for and obtaining one or more benefits from U.S. Government programs.
Nicholas Oberstadt, A Nation of Takers, America’sEntitlement Epidemic

Government is the great fiction, through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else.
Frederic Bastiat,  French economist(1801-1850)

Just because you do not take an interest in politics doesn't mean politics won't take an interest in you!
Pericles (430 B.C.)

Some paradox of our nature leads us, when once we have made our fellow men the objects of our enlightened interest, to go on to make them the objects of our pity, then of our wisdom, ultimately of our coercion.
Lionel Trilling, from “Elements That Are Wanting.”


We have come to the point where we are asked to take a giant step. We have seen how the work of God invites us to suppress the distinction between the ends and the means, and how our action is no longer a means, save to the extent in which it expresses an act of God, the ‘end’ already present. Ellul takes us one step further, and claims that no human activity—all this work of man, which today fills the field of our vision—is really a means at all.

In reality, it is no longer a means for anything; it is only an activity, and as an activity it is also subject to this conception of the means which the Christian Faith shows us. For the most part these activities are well-ordered and arranged. They are the best, well-intentioned efforts of modern (fallen) man, put in their proper places, but divested of the integrity of the fundamental unity of the end and the means in God’s willing and ordering. Therefore they are empty of value and virtue. The future of humanity does not depend upon mechanical forces.

Our President strives mightily to unite the means and the end. For every problem, he has a ‘plan.’ If he doesn’t, his close friends and imitators have one. In fact, who has ever met a politician without a plan? But there is something else here we have not seen before: our President believes he is also God, so superficially, in him, the means and the end become one. The President’s ‘plans’ (means) are the President’s ‘ends’ and they are united because he also believes he is God-- so we should all just relax and enjoy ourselves in the arms of the Nanny State.

Rather than progress from the past towards the future, the key is a movement of the future (God’s doing) which explains and informs the present. So technical discoveries are never anything more than temporary expedients which need to be put in their right place in the perspective of the Kingdom. But ‘to put them in their right place’ implies that they are only secondary aims, limited to these instruments. The secondary aims are of some use.

Thanks to this new relation between the end and the means, we can say exactly what the means are called to do, and what we may expect of them. This is something very different both from ends which are absorbed into means, or from philosophical ends which are not related at all to means. This suggests that to some extent we can apply a common standard to all these forces because of their relation to the Lordship of Jesus Christ which is already present.

Thus we can search the Scriptures to try and discover what reforms are needed now and how a temporary order of God can be set up in the world. We are doing this fully aware that this has only relative value, and whatever is done this way still will be judged in light of the order willed by God for His Kingdom. In a nutshell, man’s efforts are of some use and God expects us to honor that usefulness while keeping in mind that His Will, His Order, and His Kingdom are the only absolutes in the situation.

This attempt to place the means in their true situation, to give the right direction to human activity, will be only one more ideology, ineffective and without value, unless it is accompanied by a much deeper transformation.

Concretely, unless the world can rediscover, by a spiritual revolution, an end which is both transcendent and present, and end whose presence can be perceived even in the secret world of technics, it is lost. No matter how intensely or how thoroughly or how sincerely men search through all the philosophies, they will find that Christianity alone offers a solution.

Recently I came across an example of what he is saying here. Bojidar Marinov is a Reformed missionary to his native Bulgaria. He had been invited to Moscow to the annual Adam Smith Forum of the Libertarian Party of
Russia to join a discussion panel on “Moral Sentiments of Capitalism.” The other speakers were Russian and American academics, none of them Christian. The Members of the Libertarian Party attending were all atheists or agnostics.

Marinov says this in a report about the event:

“My talk was titled: ‘The Rhetoric at the Foundation of Capitalism, and the Ethics at the Foundation of that Rhetoric.’ I presented the case for a change in the ethical outlook in Europe in the century after the Reformation as the factor for the change in rhetoric. And the change in the ethical outlook could only be one thing: Calvinism. No other factor can explain the sudden (single-generation) paradigm shift in the Netherlands, England, Scotland and Switzerland that produced the modern world with its economic and social system, that produced enormous wealth hitherto unknown to post-flood mankind..

“I am sure most of my listeners didn’t agree with my thesis. A change of mind within an hour, over a single lecture, is a very rare thing. But I am happy to say that they at least understood my thesis quite well. How do I know if they understood it? Because I was asked the same question several times: Are you saying that if we don’t change our faith, we won’t see a change in the culture?... they grasped very well my thesis, that behind every social change there must be a faith change.”

I think this is exactly what Ellul means by ‘deeper transformation’ above. He is saying that the revelation of God in Christ Jesus alone provides a valid solution of the world’s present impossible problem of the end and the means. He is also saying that this truth will have vital consequences for the life of people who, at the present time, call themselves Christians.

For Christians, the first ‘consequence’ of this new position is this: that what actually matters, in practice, is ‘to be’ and not ‘to act.’ This world is entirely directed towards action. Everything is interpreted in terms of action, nothing is more beautiful than action. People are always looking for slogans, programs, initiatives, ways to act. Our world is so obsessed by activity, that it is in danger of losing its life. We know that the great slogan of all dictatorships is this—‘action for action’s sake.’

A familiar example of this is the inevitable answer applied to the problem of a stagnating church--start a building program. A building program keeps people busy doing and distracts them from the fact that they don’t know how to be what God intends them to be. This just brings things around again to the problem of the end and the means.

At the same time, the world tends to eliminate, almost wholly, the life of the individual. By the formation of masses, by the artificial creation of myths, by the standardizing of living, by digitizing everything, there is a general movement towards uniformity (efficiency for efficiency’s sake). This leads man more and more to forget himself as he is caught up in this general tendency of our mechanical civilization. A man who spends all his time in action, by that very fact ceases to live. Today, 60 years after Ellul made this observations, man now has the cell phone (the Droid who sticks closer than a brother) to make sure he has no waking minute of inaction, quiet, or reflection—modern man is connected to the culture of death, metaphorically and actually.

But if what we have been saying about Christianity is true: the necessity for the Christian to represent the actual true end in life, the necessity to give the world a true perspective, the necessity to rediscover secondary aims for activity itself, all this presupposes that the action is no longer master, and that what we need to do is live, and to refuse to accept the methods of action proposed by the world.

The central problem which today confronts Christians is not to know how to act. It is not to choose one method out of innumerable forms of action which the world suggests to us, not to act with, or against, or in another way. The Church is too often at the forefront of ‘white papers,’ and ‘calls to action’ and ‘programs’ to get people to take sides against something. The Church is little more than a miserable imitation of the world in this regard.

We have lost the meaning of true action, which is the testimony of a profound life, not of myth, or of propaganda, or of Mammon! What matters is to live, and not to act. In this world, this is a revolutionary attitude, for the world only desires (utilitarian) action, and has no desire for life at all. The act of being spiritually alive is a profoundly revolutionary in a world with an overpowering will to death.

At the point where men are alive rather than being obsessed with action, there means can be put in their right place. To be alive means the total situation of man as he is confronted by God; this is precisely what the world tries desperately to forget, and desperately wants Christians to forget as well.

Next week, as we finish Chapter 3, we will say more of this ‘spiritual life’ which is ‘life indeed.’ Then, in Chapter 4, The Problem of Communication” we will go into this in considerable depth.

Jerry Sweers
cmudgeon@windstream.net


2/20/2013

ALL MEANS UNSUITABLE 



GOAFS II: #30
THE PRESENCE OF THE KINGDOM: 17
Chapter 3, the end and the means
February 20, 2012


Remember, brother, everything outside the lake of fire is mercy, every drop of water is pure grace.
James McKendrick, Scottish Evangelist

Whenever there is an attack on the organization of society, there is an attack on religion.
R.J. Rushdoony, The Foundations of Social Order


The church is the report card of the culture.
Martin Selbrede

Recently I received in the mail the Jan/Feb issue of Faith For All of Life, Published by the Chalcedon Foundation. The theme of this issue is “Another Rejected Stone,” and the introductory editorial is taken from R.J. Rushdoony’s book The Foundations of Social Order: Studies in the Creeds and Councils of the Early Church. The first paragraph of this editorial is so relevant to our study that I will quote it in full:

“Every social order rests on a creed, on a concept of life and law, and represents a religion in action. Culture is religion externalized, and, as Henry Van Til observed, ‘a people’s religion comes to expression in its culture, and Christians can be satisfied with nothing less than a Christian organization of society.’ Whenever there is an attack on the organization of society, there is an attack on religion. The basic faith of a society means growth in terms of that faith, but any tampering with its basic structure is revolutionary activity. The Marxists are in this respect more astute than their adversaries: they recognize hostility to their structure as counter-revolutionary activity, as hostility to their establishment. The Life of a society is its creed; a dying creed faces desertion or subversion readily. Every creed, however healthy, is also under continual attack; the culture which neglects to defend and further its creedal base is exposing its heart to the enemy’s knife. Because of its indifference to its creedal basis in Biblical Christianity, western civilization is in a life and death struggle with humanism.”

In a way, this paragraph summarizes much of what Ellul has been saying so far. I will only make one specific comment and then we will move on. President Obama’s second inaugural speech is a reminder that he came to the White House four years ago promising to “totally transform America.” He has busily been keeping this promise by continually attacking the Judeo/Christian creedal basis upon which America was founded. He has been tireless in finding opportunities to marginalize or constrain the expression of the Judeo-Christian faith in America.

If this death struggle with humanism is being fought right now, primarily by the massive weapons of technical means that overwhelm and make irrelevant even any consideration of ends, what are the implications for the Christians who are losing the battle?

The first would be that we must recognize that our means are entirely unsuitable for the only end that matters. When we say that our means have no aim, we are speaking the simple truth. It is impossible to synchronize these means and the only end willed by God; and, for this very reason, these means are absolutely useless.

The ‘technicians’ easily get upset by what they perceive as the confusion of thought here. ‘But,’ they will say, ‘You are comparing apples to oranges, mixing things up that ought not to be mixed. We have never claimed that we could bring in the Kingdom of God by our efforts. Our technical means are adapted to immediate ends. You have no right to condemn us in the name of the Return of Christ. There are two orders which are entirely different: there are spiritual values, with the return of Christ at the end, and there are material values, the here and now. At a practical level, the advice of the technicians is, “Limit your religion to Sundays in Church, and stay out of our business.”

But this argument will not fly. First, because the whole idea of making the Kingdom of God come upon earth is the essence of what technicians imply when they use the word ‘progress.’ They believe that man will continue to evolve and the Kingdom will gradually appear through their efforts as humanity ascends to God.

Second, it is wrong to separate the two orders of matter and spirit, of grace and law. With God, the means and the end are one, in Jesus Christ. The orders of preservation and redemption are not separated, but integrated into one another. All of man’s actions are subject to the Lordship of Christ.

The bottom line is that human means (technical or otherwise) are unable to achieve their particular ends because man has refused the reality of the unique and absolute end. The science of economics will wholly fail to order economic life aright, because it assumes that economics is a closed sphere, not subject to the actual judgment of the Return of Christ. This is not man’s opinion but God’s revelation: all technical achievements are useless unless they are given their right position, and judged by the coming Kingdom of God.

Here is the second consequence, not only are our human means entirely unsuitable for the only end that matters, but all the technical means at our disposal, money, mechanical force, propaganda, movies, the press, comfort, communications, are nothing but vanity, a striving after the wind, unless they are already present in the means God uses to achieve His ends.

This is not to imply that all these means of our present civilization must be abolished, nor is it asking for some kind of arbitrary transcendentalism based on the power of the spirit of man. And it is not an optimistic view of the issue of this adventure, because we do not say that ‘this ought to happen,’ keeping our fingers crossed. A Ellul is trying to do is lay down the one essential condition which must be fulfilled if these means are to make human life, as God intends it, to be possible.

But this presupposes an attitude that is resolutely hostile to political realism, an attitude in which means are judged, not in the name of moral rules, but in virtue of this actual presence of the end willed by God.

If these means are to be fully ordered in the light of this eschatological event, they must cease to be limitless in their demands, and subject to no higher authority than themselves. They must be judged, then accepted or rejected. It is not their intrinsic virtue, their quality as means, which counts; it is their eschatological content, their faculty of being integrated under the Lordship of Jesus Christ. These means are not good or bad, they are called to enter the Kingdom of Love, and they are either able to enter it or not. They are either inside or outside the gates of the Heavenly Jerusalem. Their glory may or may not be brought as tribute to the glory of God.

This is where we have to take the largest step. We have seen how the work of God invites us to suppress the distinction between the ends and the means, and how our action is no longer a means, save to the extent in which it expresses an act of God, the ‘end’ already present. Ellul takes us one step further, and claims that no human activity—all this work of man, which today fills the field of our vision—is really a means at all.

In reality, it is no longer a means for anything; it is only an activity, and as an activity it is also subject to this conception of the means which the Christian Faith shows us. We will pick this up next week.

Jerry Sweers
Online: www.crmudgeon.blogspot.com

2/13/2013

UNITY OF END AND MEANS 



GOAFS II: #29
THE PRESENCE OF THE KINGDOM: 16
Chapter 3, the end and the means
February 13, 2012


Under every stone lurks a politician.
Aristophanes

We hang the petty thieves and appoint the great ones to public office.
Aesop

You will never understand the answer if you have not asked the right question.
James V. Schall



How is the Christian to confront the reality of a world and a worldview that is dominated by technical means that have overcome and replaced transcendental ends? The first truth that must be recognized and remembered is that for Christians there is no dissociation between the end and the means. It is a Greek ethical idea that has caused the division. The point at which we ought to start is that in the work of God the end and the means are identical. Thus, when Jesus Christ is present the Kingdom of God has ‘come upon’ us. This formula expresses very precisely the true relation between the end and the means.

When Jesus Christ appears in His incarnation, He appears as God’s means, for the salvation of man and for the establishment of the Kingdom of God—where Christ is, there also is this salvation and this kingdom.

This situation is the exact opposite of that which Ellul has described for his day and ours. Our civilization absorbs the end into the means, and in the process, obscures the action of God where the means only appears as the realized presence of the end. The end, this Kingdom, which will ‘come’ at the end of time, is already present when the divine means (the only, unique, Mediator) is present.

Whether it be the Covenant, or the Law, or the Prophets, or the history, or the wisdom of Israel: it is always the same act of God that manifests this unity of the end and the means. This should be reflected in all Christian life. For the Christian also the end and the means are united in the same way. So we are irrevocably committed to fight with all our might against the present enslavement to means.

Above all, our attitude must be different. It is not our primary task to think out plans, programs, methods of action, ‘initiatives’ of action and achievement. There is an epidemic of this behavior in the Church today, but it is nothing more than an imitation of the world that is doomed to defeat. What we can do is of no importance unless we can offer it with a ‘good conscience toward God.’

Here it is not our instruments and our institutions that count--it is ourselves. We are God’s instruments, as individuals and as members of the Church. In so far as this is true, the Church and all its members are God’s ‘means’ and ought to constitute that ‘presence’ of the end that is characteristic of the Kingdom.

We literally carry within ourselves the objective for which the world has been created by God. Christians are not in the same situation as others with regard to the end. They have received this end in themselves by the grace of God. They must represent before the world this unity between end and means, in the name and authority of Jesus Christ. For it is not man who establishes this end, and achieves it, it is God who orders and arranges it and brings it to pass.

This completely reverses the usual attitude of those who wishing to sanctify something they have accomplished by adding; ‘of course it is for God to make it fruitful,’ or ‘do what you ought to do and let what will happen,’ or ‘man proposes and God disposes,’ or the all purpose, ‘Do what I ask, if it be Thy will.’ All of this sort of thing is merely popular human wisdom, which tries to bring God in somewhere, to tack Him on in order to sanctify human effort.

In this attitude as a whole there is a dissociation between the work of man and the work of God—between the means and the end. Such a view of life is radically anti-Christian when it incites man to carry on his affairs, and then adds ‘God’ out of a sense of ‘decency’ belonging to another age.

This means, for example, that we do not have to strive and struggle in order that righteousness may reign upon the earth. We have to be ‘just’ or ‘righteous’ ourselves, bearers of righteousness (salt and light again). The Scriptures tell us that where there is a just man justice prevails. It is understood that here the world ‘just’ means ‘justified’ by Christ. This is why justice prevails where there is a just man.

The just man lives by the justice of Christ. This justice is present, for it is this which makes him just. This justice is not a goal to attain, or a balance to be acquired. Rather it is a gift of God, free and inexplicable. A gift that exists in our lives so that our means are not intended to ‘bring in’ justice, but rather to ‘manifest’ it.

Likewise we do not need to force ourselves, with great effort and intelligence, to bring peace on earth. We ourselves have to be peaceful, peacemakers. Where there are peacemakers, peace reigns. And it is always the same idea which prevails. When God completed the original creation, He declared it ‘very good.’ His intentions for that creation were good, the ends he desired in the development of the creation were good. He made it a living creation in Jesus Christ—and His aims (like peace) were intended to be translated through Christians who were to be salt and light, the ‘means’ ordered by God.

The principle of a Christian ethic begins here. Our mission is to search the Scriptures for the way in which we ought to live, in order that the end, willed by God, should be present among men. The whole object of ethics is not to attain an end but to manifest the gift that has been given to us in Christ. This is the gift of grace and peace, of love and of the Holy Spirit, the very end pursued by God and miraculously present within us.

This overturns our whole idea of ‘human means’ and cuts away its root of pride and power within us. The ‘means’ is no longer called to achieve anything. It is delivered from its uncertainty of the way to follow, and the success to be expected.

We are freed from the obsession with means, from which our time is suffering. Thus the Church can accept the reality that it is not our possibilities that control our actions, but it is God’s end, present within us.

Ellul does not ignore or devalue institutions but insists that changes in them should be the result of the recognition of God’s order for the world and not be the first and primary consideration. He suggests that “it is quite good to discover institutional reforms, on the condition that this research is the product of our fundamental attitude, and that it is an expression, pure an simple, of the presence of God’s end in the world. And also that the change takes place through the living presence, in the contemporary world, of the end, and also of the judgment.”

He points out the elimination of slavery as a social reform that sprung from Christianity. Slavery was gradually suppressed during the course of the third and forth centuries, not by decrees, nor by direct condemnation of slavery by the Church, nor by individual Christians. It was because Christians of the day were quite conscious of the equality with their slaves, since they were all, as Christians, looking for the Return of Christ. Since Christ was about to come, it seemed both useless and unjust to have slaves. The institutional reforms that followed grew out of the faith of the Church, not from the technical competence of a few experts, whether they were Christians or not.     

The implications of this for our time suggest an unprecedented upheaval of the massive means that our civilization has been piling up. Ellul begins to examine some of the implications of this next week.

Jerry Sweers
Online: www.crmudgeon.blogspot.com


2/06/2013

WHAT WOULD BUDDHA DO? 

NUMBER 204
WHAT WOULD BUDDHA DO?


The other day I found myself sitting at a stop light reading messages to the world on the back of a late model van. The one that caught my attention was this attempt to stick a finger in the eye of those sincere Christians with their WWJD? paraphernalia.

WHAT WOULD BUDDHA DO?

I had a very strong urge to get out of my car, walk to the driver’s window and give her an answer to this question. I say “her” because the rest of the stickers on the back door strongly suggested a “save the whales-kill the babies-tree hugging-vegetarian lesbian” with a very large chip (organically grown, oven-baked, of course) on her shoulder.

I would have said was this: “Your bumper sticker asks a question: What would Buddha do? I have the answer; Buddha would do nothing, he has been dead for almost 2,500 years.”

But the light changed and the van moved off and I had to go about my business.




You can ring this little fellow’s bell and ask for good luck, but he will not answer and is not able to do a thing for you. The Alpha and Omega, THE ONE WHO WAS, THE ONE WHO IS and THE ONE WHO IS TO COME is in a whole different class than the gods of the pagans who inhabit the bumper-stickers of the world.

Some years ago when we lived in Southern California it was a fairyland of bumper stickers. I’m told it still is. A pair that still stands out in my memory was on the back of a scruffy looking pickup truck:

On the left side; WELCOME TO MILLER TIME

On the right side; JESUS IS LORD

I have often wondered if this represented a husband and wife debate. The British Preacher Leonard Ravenhill used to suggest that if you put a bumper sticker on one side that says:

JESUS LOVES YOU AND HAS A WONDERFUL PLAN FOR YOUR LIFE

You should balance it with one on the other side saying:

GOD IS ANGRY WITH SINNERS EVERY DAY!

It takes more space than a bumper sticker offers to present the One the Apostle John describes in his vision on Patmos:

I, John, both your brother and companion in the tribulation and kingdom and patience of Jesus Christ, was on the island that is called Patmos for the word of God and for the testimony of Jesus Christ. I was in the Spirit on the Lord’s Day, and I heard behind me a loud voice, as of a trumpet, saying, “I am the Alpha and the Omega, the First and the Last,” and, “What you see, write in a book and send it to the seven churches which are in Asia: to Ephesus, to Smyrna, to Pergamos, to Thyatira, to Sardis, to Philadelphia, and to Laodicea.”

Then I turned to see the voice that spoke with me. And having turned I saw seven golden lampstands, and in the midst of the seven lampstands One like the Son of Man, clothed with a garment down to the feet and girded about the chest with a golden band. His head and hair were white like wool, as white as snow, and His eyes like a flame of fire; His feet were like fine brass, as if refined in a furnace, and His voice as the sound of many waters; He had in His right hand seven stars, out of His mouth went a sharp two-edged sword, and His countenance was like the sun shining in its strength.

And when I saw Him, I fell at His feet as dead. But He laid His right hand on me, saying to me, “Do not be afraid; I am the First and the Last. I am He who lives, and was dead, and behold, I am alive forevermore. Amen. Revelation 1.9-18


This is the Lord we serve—He is not a bumper sticker kind of God.


TOTALITARIAN MEANS 



GOAFS II: #28
THE PRESENCE OF THE KINGDOM: 15
Chapter 3, the end and the means
February 6, 2012


It is not what a lawyer tells me I may do; but what humanity, reason, and justice tell me I ought to do.
Edmund Burke

True religion confronts earth with heaven and brings eternity to bear upon time.
A.W. Tozer, The Knowledge of the Holy

Modern psychology has replaced the soul with the self.
Theodore Dalrymple

There is no God but Me.
First and Great Commandment of Progressive Liberalism




As we saw last week, means have become totalitarian. Our civilization is wholly a civilization of means and means affect all spheres of life. Means respect nothing. This totalitarian reality can be considered from two points of view.

First of all, means have become so exclusive that they exclude everything which does not help their progress, everything that does not contribute to their development. In addition, the means destroys all that threatens its development. Technics will attack and ruin successively the moral judgment (and in consequence, morals as a whole) and the humanism which claims to subordinate all things to man (but technics does not admit that it can be limited by the interests of man). Means despises all the activity in which man expresses himself freely for the disinterested pleasure in the activity itself.

Everything must be ‘useful.’ Art for art’s sake must be replaced by art for the use of the community or the regime. All spiritual awareness must be put away because it is essential that man should be blind, so that he can be a good slave of the means which he creates. Technics will abolish the critical sense, in order to be able to develop freely (as everyone thinks) for the greater good of humanity.

As the ancients put out the eyes of the nightingales in order to make them sing better, so does technology through means rise triumphantly on the ruins of human values and constructs its own values, which will help it ascend. All these new values are aids, supports of the means, as, for instance, the new type of myth. The State, the nation, the race, the proletariat, labor, and today, multiculturalism as god, are presented to us according to the different parties as ‘spiritual values’ when in reality, they are simply illusions to make man accept the desert--the terrifying sterility of the world in which he is living.

The essence of these new, means-based myths is that they place the spiritual at the service of means. They permit the use of that which until recently seemed impossible to use in man (and, by this very fact, was rejected by Marxist realism). This is the great discovery of the United States of America, which began to use Christianity as a factor in labor (the Calvinistic work ethic), then of the Fascist dictatorships, that utilized spiritual forces for the material power of the nation. Eventually Communism seems to have understood this point, and in its turn began to utilize myths of whatever kind they could, even Christian ones, for the dictatorship of the proletariat.

This subordination of the spiritual to technical means is the great revolution, and in truth the only revolution which our day has accomplished: that is to say, the final point which effectively puts a stop to any possibility of true revolution.

The second aspect of this totalitarianism of means is that gradually it extends its sphere to everything; not only are material objects subordinated to technology, but man also. Man is no longer subject, he becomes the object of the forces which he has created. Man no longer seeks to know himself, in order that he may acquire self-mastery, but simply in order that he may be used. He is no longer concerned to discover his true ‘image’ (“made in the image of God”), but to reduce it to the state of ‘facsimile.’

Ellul saw the eventual removal of everything transcendental from the public school system so that it could carefully craft little wheels, cogs, pulleys and chains to fit perfectly into the machinery of Leviathan, the Absolute State. Today science (and, by implication ‘means’) is the god of the public educational system. Ellul listed some things he saw 60 years ago along this line: psychological tactics, labor camps, propaganda, and directed leisure.

The autocracy of means also invades the spiritual sphere; what were once spiritual problems have become problems of ‘the means to use.’ This denudes ‘spiritual means’ of all substance, and because man has become ‘object,’ and because the spiritual is classified among spiritual ‘means,’ existence no longer has any possible significance.

Existentialism (A philosophy that emphasizes the uniqueness and isolation of the individual experience in a hostile or indifferent universe, regards human existence as unexplainable, and stresses freedom of choice and responsibility for the consequences of one's acts.), the philosophy of Ellul’s day, was right to remind man that his existence was what it was, but it was wrong to suggest that man is free to give fresh meaning to his life. The irremediable triumph of means takes away all liberty from man along this line. In face of all this, if we somehow still manage to believe in the angelic virtue of man, it only shows that we do not know either ourselves or our own day.

In 60 years the reigning philosophy has shifted several times, it has been a  downward spiral to the present, where we have a narcissistic (Excessive love or admiration of oneself.) nihilism (An extreme form of skepticism that denies all existence. A doctrine holding that all values are baseless and that nothing can be known or communicated. Rejection of all distinctions in moral or religious value and a willingness to repudiate all previous theories of morality or religious belief. The belief that destruction of existing political or social institutions is necessary for future improvement.) This is well-illustrated in The First and Great Commandment of Progressive Liberalism: ‘There is no other God but Me.”

We are caught in a trap. It is no use pretending to be ‘deep,’ and to talk loftily about the possession of inward liberty. If liberty cannot be expressed in my life it is an illusion. For the Christian this situation is appalling, for what we have been describing actually proves that it is impossible, in human terms, to live one’s faith, to bear genuine witness.

Of course, in these terms, it has always been impossible to live one’s faith, and we easily comfort ourselves by saying ‘our day is no worse than any other,’ and that ‘our difficulties are just the same.’ But that is just not true. It may have always been impossible to live one’s faith, but that was due to inward causes; “Woe unto me! For the good which I would I do not: but the evil which I would not, that I practice.”

But today this inward difficulty is greatly increased by external causes. In no other civilization has man been so totally repressed. He may have been the slave to hunger, of natural circumstances, or of another man: but he always managed to preserve a margin of freedom, sufficient to remain master of the greater part of his time, and to choose his own line, out of more than one possibility.

All civilizations have imposed a certain amount of restriction, but they left man a large field for free and individual action. The Roman slave or the mediaeval serf, was freer, more personal, more socially human (Ellul would not say ‘happier,’ from the material point of view) than the modern industrial worker or the Soviet Union official.

Our civilization which claims to exert no restraint tries to dominate man as a whole, and to confine him within narrow limits, where all his gestures, and his secret thoughts will be controlled by the social machine (absolute political correctness). In America, the land of the free and the home of the brave, hate crime legislation is rapidly working on this—Leviathan has his toe in the door, thought control is already making good progress in Canada, and Western Europe, we are not far behind.

Ellul suggests that this is primarily a spiritual battle for Christians and unless they begin to take it seriously, both the social and individual aspects of Christian life and witness are in great danger. Christians must recognize that this conflict is ‘not against flesh and blood, but against the principalities, against the powers, against the world rulers of this darkness.” (Eph. 6.12) And they ought to know that this conflict, which is primarily spiritual, at least at first, is a life and death struggle. This spiritual conflict is just as brutal as any battle in time of war.

When the Apostle Paul wrote, the enemy in this conflict was the world, the flesh and the Devil. When Ellul wrote the enemy was essentially the same. Today there is another major player, a false religion with a false god, a false prophet, and a lying book—Islam. This too is the subject of another book but we need to remember that things seem to have gotten more complicated in the past 60 years. 

Ellul has ideas about what to do. He will not suggest means of action, opposing one form of technology against another. He will remind his readers of an ancient Christian way, abandoned for the last 300 years, which moves in the opposite direction of the triumphant path traced by modern technology.

Jerry Sweers
Online: www.crmudgeon.blogspot.com

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