ABUNDANCE!
a sermon preached by the Rev. Dr. Tim W. Jensen
at the First Religious Society in Carlisle, Massachusetts
Sunday February 22th, 2004
OPENING WORDS: “Real happiness is cheap enough, yet how dearly we pay
for its counterfeit.” -- Hosea Ballou
I’ve decided that I could get used to this concept of the one-word sermon title.
It’s so succinct, so efficient -- and yet so richly evocative as well. Joy! Love!
And now Abundance! -- a word which means, literally, “overflowing,” thus making
it a perfect compliment to these other topics of recent weeks. Abundant Love.
Abundant Joy. Abundant blessings of all sorts: the word simply overflows with
connotations of wealth and prosperity, freedom, success and happiness. It’s a
word which positively inspires generosity and creativity; and then there’s always
that lovely scriptural reference to John 10:10 -- “The thief comes only to steal
and kill and destroy; I come that they may have life, and have life more abundantly.”
Not “Eternal Life” in the sense of a life-span which lasts forever. But “Abundant
Life” -- a life-force which overflows with the Spirit of the Divine, a life-style
which is emersed in a consciousness of ultimate meaning and value.
The opposite of abundance might be thought of as scarcity, or deficiency, in which
the blessings of life are reduced to a trickle. Poverty and Privation. Hunger,
Uncertainty, Fear. I suppose it’s possible to have all these things in abundance
as well -- our lives can overflow with the bad as well as with the good, although
there is certainly abundant irony in that. And yet, often abundance is in the
eye of the beholder...what appears abundant to one may seem barely sufficient,
or even inadequate, to another, and how do we determine whose perceptions are
correct? In his second Inaugural address in 1937, as America struggled to escape
the privations of the Great Depression through a series of controversial federal
policies known as the “New Deal,” FDR remarked that “the test of our progress
is not whether we add more to the abundance of those who have much; it is whether
we provide enough for those who have too little.” Sixty-seven years (and eleven
Presidential administrations) later, we seem to have forgotten this fundamental
criterion of the worthiness of a society. Has our nation changed so much in just
two generations, that we have metaphorically gained the whole world, and lost
our own souls? Have we somehow allowed our relative material abundance to distract
us from more essential spiritual values of generosity and compassion?
You know, I’ve often had to wonder how it is that such an unrepentant, dyed-in-the-wool
Socialist like myself has found himself serving, and serving quite happily and
successfully, in such affluent communities as Midland Texas, and Nantucket Island,
and now here in Carlisle. I think part of it has to do with the fact that, although
I’ve never really had much money myself, I grew up in a fairly affluent household,
in a fairly affluent neighborhood, and thus saw close up (and at a very impressionable
age) what that was like, along with the abundant psychological pressures that
often emerge from wrestling with the temptation of confusing one’s self-worth
with one’s net worth. And I think part of it has to do with the fact that I try
never to take myself too seriously, which gives others permission not to take
me too seriously either, but rather just seriously enough that perhaps they receive
some fresh insight into their own lives from looking at life itself from a slightly
different perspective.
We Americans like to think that we live in a class-less society. We don’t, really,
but since our forebearers once fought a revolution based on the self-evident truths
that all white, male property-owners of a certain age were created equal, and
endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, it still gives us comfort
to pretend that we do. And one of the consequences of this is that no matter how
much (or really, how little) money we may have, we still typically feel like we’re
“Middle-Class.” Even Bill Gates (who is certainly smart enough to know better),
still basically feels like a very, very, very, very well-to-do Middle Class American.
But for the rest of us, this same cultural phenomenon often means that we tend
to assume that how we live is “normal,” -- while at the same time privately feeling
that anyone who has considerably more than we do is somehow “extravagant,” and
wondering how anyone else can get by on anything less. These assumptions don’t
generally rise to the level of conscious thought; if we stopped to think about
it we would know, intellectually at least, that they weren’t exactly true. But
typically we don’t think about it, unless something dramatically changes -- unless
we lose our job, or are in danger of losing our job; or (which is sometimes even
worse) we receive a sudden financial windfall, like winning the lottery. Our comfortable
notions of “appropriate abundance” become disrupted, and we are compelled to recalculate
our entire relationship to the material world.
Tied in with all of this is something we sometimes like to call the “Protestant
Work Ethic.” This term is derived from the writings of a German Sociologist of
Religion named Max Weber, who lived and worked about a hundred years ago. Weber
was trying to understand why Western Civilization was the way it was, and he basically
ended up blaming it all on Puritan angst. Medieval economists (who were
basically monks) understood that Personal Industry combined with Frugality (two
good “religious” virtues) would eventually create wealth. But they also understood
that Wealth often led to laziness and self-indulgence, which in turn often led
to dissolute Poverty...and so they encouraged those who would listen to avoid
this problem by continuing to work hard and spend little, and contributing their
excess wealth to the less fortunate in the form Christian Charity, which would
help you get to heaven. But John Calvin believed that the ultimate fate of any
particular individual’s immortal soul had all been determined by God before the
beginning of time; it was all predestined, and so (according to Weber) this resulted
in a situation where Protestant Christians transformed the spiritual “other-worldly
asceticism” of the monastery into the “Worldly Asceticism” embodied in the Spirit
of Capitalism, in which industry and frugality continued to remain virtues, but
accumulated wealth was reinvested in expanding the enterprise, since Charity was
now irrelevant to one’s salvation, while success was considered a tangible sign
of God’s pre-determined favor. The wealthier you became, the more it meant God
loved you. Or at least that’s how Max Weber saw it.
There are plenty of problems with Weber’s sociology, but the great irony is that
because his ideas were so innovative and popular at the time they were first published,
in many ways they have become self-fulfilling. In large part this was due to the
fact that they provided a theological justification for yet another philosophy,
known as Social Darwinism, which was already popular at the time Weber was writing.
As you might guess, the Social Darwinists believed that human civilization was
essentially a struggle for “survival of the fittest” -- society is divided into
“winners” and “losers,” both the rich and the poor get what they deserve, and
any attempt to ameliorate the suffering of the latter only makes civilization
itself less strong. Social Darwinism is a self-serving philosophy which worships
both power and privilege, while essentially renouncing the fundamental principles
of compassionate ethical conduct commonly shared among all of the world’s great
religions. Yet because it sounds “scientific,” and because of Weber’s observation
that within some sects of Protestant Christianity wealth was historically considered
a sign of God’s favor, it has proved surprisingly resilient, especially among
those who have accumulated some degree of wealth, and who want to believe that
they are among God’s favorites.
And even those of use who explicitly reject these values and assumptions sometimes
still have to deal with their implicit consequences. In my experience, this problem
shows up most directly when we enter into the process of trying to figure out
for ourselves the precise relationship between work and lifestyle that we believe
will produce for us the greatest level of personal fulfillment. It’s a task we
typically first confront when we are young and making decisions about our careers,
but in many ways it remains a challenge all our lives, as we continue to grow
and learn about what truly makes us feel happy and fulfilled. I personally believe,
for example, that frugality is still a very satisfying lifestyle choice. I understand
that contemporary American society is mostly based on “consumption,” and the notion
that somehow acquiring more stuff will provide us with happiness...and at times
I still even buy into that...although I try not to take it too seriously. But
you can all probably tell just by the way I dress all week long: “Use it up, wear
it out, make it do or do without.” -- I have a whole closet full of stuff like
that.
My main problem comes on the other end: trying to figure out where the line is
between frugality and parsimony. I don’t mind living cheaply, and I certainly
want to feel like I’m getting my money’s worth, but I sure don’t want to be thought
of as a cheapskate, either in the way that I treat myself or in my interactions
with others. And this brings me to the second part of the equation, which is the
realization that generosity is not only an act of charity, of “Love” -- it is
also an act of Creativity...a way in which we put our life-energy to work in the
world in order to change it for the better. When we allow our Creativity to overflow...when
we live life abundantly, sharing our industry with others, good things happen.
And this, more than any other thing that we can do, is what gives live meaning.
I want to leave you with just three more brief observations which you can take
home with you and ponder over the next few days or weeks, and then maybe when
you get a chance you can tell me what you think. And the first of these is the
insight that you can almost always get by on a lot less than you think, and that
it’s a lot better to figure this out BEFORE you actually have to do it. I have
a colleague out on the West Coast who is encouraging folks, as a Lenten discipline,
to try to live for six weeks on the minimum wage for their area. I mean, think
about that for a moment. Even if we took the mortgage off the table, and ignored
things like our pensions and our health insurance, how many of us could actually
“get by” on $6.75 an hour, or $270 a week...before taxes? And yet there are lots
of people in this country who are trying to get by on this, or even less....and
the realization that if you had to you could too is actually rather liberating....which
is not at all to minimize the hardship of those who are trying to do it for real.
Thoreau said it as well as anyone: “if you are restricted in your range by poverty...you
are but confined to the most significant and vital experiences.... It is life
near the bone where it is sweetest. You are defended from being a trifler.”
This brings me to the second observation, which is that the Best things in Life
truly are free. “Superfluous wealth can buy superfluities only,” Thoreau wrote.
“Money is not required to buy one necessary of the soul....” And this is not to
suggest that because the best things are free, we don’t need money at all. But
remember never to let the scramble for money distract you from enjoying the things
that money just can’t buy. Because if you do, you are getting ripped off. You
are cheating yourself of the World’s most abundant treasures, the things which
ultimately make life worth living.
And finally, don’t forget the principle of Noblesse Oblige -- “to those
to whom much is given, much is expected.” This simple idea is what truly ties
together all of the activities of a meaningful and fulfilling life. When life
has treated you to abundant blessings, pass them on. And if life isn’t treating
you so well at the moment, don’t be too proud or stubborn to accept and enjoy
the shared abundance of others. Because when we let it be what it truly is, Abundance
Overflows. It can’t be contained, it can’t be hoarded, it can’t be bottled and
sold in stores, or even saved for a rainy day. But the good news is, there’s more
where that came from. And that knowledge is what gives us life, and gives us life
more abundantly.
READING: from Walden by Henry David Thoreau
“Do not trouble yourself much to get new things, whether clothes or friends. Turn
the old; return to them. Things do not change; we change. Sell your clothes and
keep your thoughts. God will see that you do not want society....We are often
reminded that if there were bestowed on us the wealth of Croesus, our aims must
still be the same, and our means essentially the same. Moreover, if you are restricted
in your range by poverty, if you cannot buy books and newspapers, for instance,
you are but confined to the most significant and vital experiences; you are compelled
to deal with the material which yields the most sugar and the most starch. It
is life near the bone where it is sweetest. You are defended from being a trifler.
No [one] loses ever on a lower level by magnanimity on a higher. Superfluous wealth
can buy superfluities only. Money is not required to buy one necessary of the
soul....
“Rather than love, than money, than fame, give me truth....”