In admiring
spring’s hosts of golden daffodils we easily forget the significance of the sad
tale of the mythological figure after whom they take their generic name.
Narcissus fell in love with his own reflection in a pond, and spent his life,
in Stephen Fry’s words, “with eyes only for himself, and consideration for no
one and nothing but himself”.1 The gods eventually turned him into a
daffodil with its head looking down.
Narcissism – or
“individualism”, to give it the more common title – focusses on oneself and
one’s interests, appearance, advancement and status, often to the exclusion of
all others. It has almost become the purpose of life for many people in western
society. It’s not just selfies and fast fashion for Instagram and Facebook. It’s
also the me-first race for the lights or the checkout, and the bullying,
ridiculing, trashing and trolling of people who think, look or live differently
to ourselves.
It vaunts
itself as the ultimate arbiter of taste and truth. It asserts its desires often
disguised as “rights”. It ignores the wider context of the common good,
hamstrings church life, hinders our relationship with God and hampers our
prayers. It fosters the cynicism and factions that the Archbishop of
Canterbury, speaking at the February 2019 General Synod, urged the Church of
England to give up. Above all, it reverses the thrust of the Lord’s Prayer and
Jesus’ prayer in Gethsemane: it insists on “My will, not yours, be done.”
Contrast that
with the love St Paul described in 1 Corinthians 13 which doesn’t boast or
envy, isn’t proud or self-seeking, and never dishonours others. “Do nothing out
of selfish ambition or vain conceit,” he writes in Philippians 2:3-4. “Rather
in humility value others above yourselves, not looking to your own interests
but each of you to the interests of others.”
Contemporary
narcissism is often subtle, however, and it is important not to make sweeping
judgements of others. Being judgemental can be an expression of narcissism because
it asserts our own assumed superiority. The disastrous British Army recruitment
drive in 2018 wrongly assumed a generational trait of “Me me me Millennials”.
It failed to impress many of its target audience because, glued to screens as
that generation might be, it is also highly critical of the “me me me” attitude
of older generations, remote government and uncaring, profit-obsessed commerce that
has led to environmental breakdown and growing poverty.
Freedom and responsibility
While Christians
are freed from the many constraints of legalism, no-one is free to do as they
please. Paul stressed this to the Roman church where, it seems, some were so
rejoicing in their new-found freedom in Christ that they were indulging every personal
desire (Romans 6:1-18). There are boundaries for conduct (both in the Ten
Commandments and the teaching of the Apostles) that are intended to limit human
excess and preserve corporate relationships.
To accept
personal responsibility and restrain ones conduct is to make a positive
commitment to community. (This is why Paul, who had long forsaken Jewish food
restrictions, submitted to them for the sake of people whose consciences were
more sensitive, 1 Corinthians 9:19-23, 10:23-33.) Individualism can adversely affect
a wide pool of people. In Joshua 7 national defeat results from the wrong
action of one person. To us, that may seem unfair; to ancient Israelites it was
the natural outworking of what scholars call “corporate solidarity”. In
biology, one deadly spore can infect a large group or area; in society, the
effects of one person’s sins spread to others. (Which is what lies behind
Paul’s teaching about “original sin” in Romans 5:12-19.)
The Bible
outlaws the self-justifying blame culture, too. “The one who sins is the one
who will die” was Ezekiel’s response to an ancient Israelite complaint that the
current generation was paying for the errors of its forefathers. He had an
equally curt message to the clergy and leaders of his day (called watchmen); if
they failed to warn people of danger arising from their risky behaviour, the
watchmen themselves would be held to account (Ezekiel 18:4; 33:6). Biblically,
the common good takes precedence over personal preference or power and party prestige
or policy.
It even
suggests that corporate solidarity involves the innocent in the sins of the
guilty. In Ezra 9 the eponymous teacher publicly confessed “we have sinned”
when only 112 people out of several thousand had broken one of the laws of
Moses – and Ezra was not one of them.
Narcissus fell in love with his own reflection. Individualism is a barrier to community. |
Community commitment
Both Old and
New Testaments assume a personal commitment to one another in community. Jesus
spoke of “the Kingdom of God”, which exists wherever the rule of God is applied
in human relationships and activity. “It was the final expression of the
distinctive Hebrew tenet that God is the proper head of human society,”
according to one theologian.2 Christians belong to it by virtue of
their commitment to King Jesus.
Paul described
“the body of Christ”, the church, as such an integrated whole that when “one
part suffers, every part suffers with it” (1 Corinthians 12:26). Believers are
not semi-detached, even if we behave as if we are. That makes the Christian
song so poignant and necessary: “Bind us together, Lord, bind us together, with
cords that cannot be broken.”
The New
Testament occasionally describes the church as a family or even a nation
(Ephesians 2:19-22; 1 Peter 2:9-10). In such groupings, disagreements are
inevitable. So Paul pleaded with the early church to “make every effort to
maintain the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace” (Ephesians 4:3), echoing
one of Jesus’ two unanswered prayers, that “they may be one as we [the Trinity]
are one” (John 17:11). How can it be otherwise, if “there is neither Jew nor
Gentile, neither slave nor free, nor is there male and female, for you are all
one in Christ Jesus” (Galatians 3:28)?
But it is
otherwise, sadly. One of the natural outcomes of narcissism is fragmentation of
communities and churches into cliques, and splinter or single-issue groups.
According to one count, there are 38,000 Christian denominations in the world
today. Splits can sometimes divide individual congregations as one sub-group
prefers their way to that of others.
Indeed, our
sense of belonging is often focussed on a specific sub-group rather than the
whole of which the group is a part. Within towns churches usually work
independently (and often competitively), and only occasionally pool resources
to make a missional impact on the wider community before retreating back into
their own comfort zones.
Narcissism can also
diminish our prayers. “Prayer is the mirror image of individualism, even though
it may appear to be a highly individual activity,” wrote theologian James
Houston. “A relationship with God that does not relate to other people is
unreal. … We pray to a God who loves the world, and so our prayers will be
false if we do not respond by loving other people as well as loving God.”3
It was not for
nothing that Jesus taught his disciples to pray Our Father – not my
Father. The whole of the Lord’s prayer is couched in communal terms: Give us our daily bread. Forgive us our sins. Lead us not into temptation. Deliver us
from evil. And it’s chief missional petition – your Kingdom come, your will be
done on earth – is really a prayer for the restoration of love, care, peace and
mutual support in the diversity of the world and church.
Faith can become
privatised instead of leading us into a model community reflecting the unity of
the Trinity in a disordered and fragmented world. Here’s some practical steps
to help us rebuild true community within church fellowships:
·
Teach
yourself to think we, us rather than me or them when considering any aspect of church life.
·
Pray
for all the sub-groups and activities in your church, not just those you are a
part of.
·
Before
developing “your” group, ask how it can better dovetail into the wider church
and what effects your development might have upon, and contribute to, the
whole.
·
Before
undertaking a new initiative, ask what similar work is already being done that
you could join with and further assist without taking over or competing for
scarce financial and human resources.
·
Consult
widely and ask what the Holy Spirit might be leading us to do (or not do; good
ideas sometimes arise from individuals’ agendas or experiences and are not
always applicable everywhere).
·
Find
ways of ensuring that all the sub-groups can meet each other regularly and
exchange news.
All it takes is
some mutual trust and respect, with a sprinkling of patience and humility. Use the spring daffs as a reminder of
the dangers of narcissism, and see the beauty of a clump of them as a reminder
of the benefit of community over individualism.
Think and talk
1. Paul
immersed himself in local cultures and so identified himself with others that
he made himself “all things to all people so that by all possible means I might
save some” (1 Corinthians 9:22). What principle might this suggest for mutual
fellowship and mission?
2. Jesus said “a house divided against itself will
fall” (Luke 11:17). While the context was not about the church, the principle
applies. What steps can you take to strengthen the bonds in your church so that
you may grow together?3. Jesus also described the Kingdom of God in terms of equal treatment of unequal people (Matthew 20:1-16). How might this principle affect the way you welcome and integrate people into church life and activities?
4. Why do we find it so hard to think “we” rather than “me”? What can you do to change this mindset in yourself?
References
1. Stephen Fry, Mythos, Penguin Books 2018, p. 341-2.
2. Charles Ryder Smith, The Bible doctrine of society, T & T Clark, 1920, p.255-63. James Houston, The transforming friendship, Lion Publishing 1991, p.54
© Derek
Williams 2019
This material may be reproduced for
local church use with full acknowledgement of its source.
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