How we love our myth of self-determination

“If you obey the Bible as an experiment it’s cool. If you obey it out of conviction you are naive and backwards.” This is what I discern our culture to be telling us. AJ Jacobs wrote a book “The Year of Living Biblically” where he tries to follow what the Bible says as literally as possible. I love what he says on his website: “I’m officially Jewish but I’m Jewish in the same way the Olive Garden is an Italian restaurant”. That’s a great quote and it reveals both a lot of truth about ourselves as well as a deep suspicion we hold about all kinds of religious people.

I can imagine the reactions that AJ Jacobs got from all sorts of people when they learned of his project. I’m sure many thought it was strange and they were happy someone else was trying it, yet I suppose others affirmed it as being clever, cool, chic, spiritual. The irony of this is that if he were an orthodox believer of one stripe or another, especially if he was raised that way people would have likely thought less of his project. He would have been either thought to be dim or ill served by family and kin.

Diet spirituality is also in vogue. Refusing to eat animals or only eating locally grown food clearly has social currency in some groups. These disciplines express spiritual values. Again, however, if you inherited a religious tradition complete with dietary restrictions you’re likely accumulating social debt rather than capital. What is the difference? Self-determination. A bit of exegesis on this subject helps tease out some interesting assumptions in our culture.

We have assumptions about individualism and free choice. Even if all sorts of emo hipsters refuse to consume the flesh of animals, whether raised in cages or free range, each one feels that their choice to do so is somehow more free and individual than those who as adults follow a religious tradition. If you do it without being told to do it, then it’s free. If you do it because someone who within a community is assumed to have some sort of authority tells you to do it, then what you’re doing is “inauthentic”. The act is spiritually evacuated by some group or traditional sense of authority. That subtle (and actually deceptive) assumption is that implicit authority which clearly exists in an community or movement which elicits all sorts of group behavior, commonalities in language, dress, and custom including food prescription somehow is freed from the taint of “telling” is of course hollow. As communal creatures even from a very young age most of us are very adept as discerning acceptance, rejection, criticism and approval from groups that never codify their values.

What does all of this say? We have very strong issues surrounding “being told what to do”. If we are all self-determined, in the same sort of way, just like all the school kids that freely chose their own clothing, but all dress according to their implicit canon. We are self-determined like each generation that names their children freely, all with the same half dozen names, or with names that all sound alike. In other words its cool, as long as no one told you you had to do it that way. You’re free to be an individual, just like everyone else.

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About PaulVK

Husband, Father of 5, Pastor
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