Not that sort of Journey. . . |
The seductiveness of consumerism depends upon desire not being reducible to the desire for satisfaction. Desire is not only a restless lacking from which we seek deliverance. Desire can become reflexive, so that desire itself becomes desirable. It is more seductive to play upon the desirability of desire than to rush to satisfy desire. . . . People go shopping not just to acquire a product, but to go shopping. Sometimes people purposefully “go shopping” not in order to buy anything, but just to “go shopping.” The sociologist Zygmunt Baumann writes that in consumer society, “It is the running itself which is exhilarating, and however tiring it may be, the track is a more enjoyable place than the finishing line.” We who are formed by consumerism might be none too happy to have our restless hearts stilled in God. The restlessness is far too stimulating and desirable.John F. Hoffmeyer, ‘Sacramental Theology in a Consumer Society’, Dialog 53:2 (2014), pp. 127–133; quotation from p. 129
If some people do prefer the journey to the destination, I
wonder how far they’ve succumbed to a consumerist mind-set. What – or in what
ways – can growth be achieved by hopping from one spiritual discipline to
another on the spiritual journey, as though moving from, say, a daily quiet
time reading Scripture to mindfulness is an upgrade? Surely the concept of spiritual
discipline implies perseverance. And I can’t help but notice that Baumann’s
running-track imagery contrasts starkly with the author of Hebrews, who points
out that Jesus fixed his eyes on the goal (Hebrews 12:1-2) rather than on the
race itself. If the spiritual life is a journey, then for Christians, with eyes
fixed on Jesus, the destination, and not a path of spiritual consumerism, has
to take priority.
Interesting, that hadn't occurred to me before. I think maybe "moving from, say, a daily quiet time reading Scripture to mindfulness" might be in an attempt to keep things fresh in one's relatinship with God rather than from a restless sense of consumerism/wanting to 'upgrade' (very tickled by that concept). I guess you could argue that the whole notion of 'keeping things fresh' implies some childish need for stimulation and novelty, but I think that's partly down to personality and hey we're all human.
ReplyDeleteHi, Rosie. Yeah, I fully accept the need to keep things fresh - I think my main target is faddism and the idea that spiritual disciplines can be upgraded. Perhaps this target's only in my mind!
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