Friday, November 4, 2022

Responding to our father's nakedness

It is clear, from Noah cursing Ham's line, that he had felt radically disrespected by his son's disdain (Genesis 9:20-24).  In street gangs in large Western cities, respect can be a matter of life and death. We all need love and respect, and I know that I have felt undermined at times by disrespect.  Mother Teresa's saying that nakedness is not just for a piece of cloth, comes to mind. Respect is easily lost, I mean if I do ten things right and one thing wrong, what stands out in the minds of others?  Noah, in obedience to God, had stood firm against ridicule and accusation, he had rescued his family from the flood that had wiped out the rest of humanity. But all that seems to have been lost in Ham's mind by his father's drunken nakedness.

We saw earlier that nakedness in the Bible is a symbol of guilt and shame and of being exposed (Genesis 3:8-10; Revelation 3:17). Jordon Peterson gives an interesting application of this passage.  He says “We are constantly pushed to see the nakedness of our Father, so to speak, because of the intense criticism that’s directed towards our culture—the patriarchal culture. We’re constantly exposing its weaknesses, vulnerabilities, and, let’s say, its nakedness.”  And surly what is happening here is blindness to the good, and the inevitable overreaction to its faults.  How many people going through divorce make statements like “All men are ...”, or “All women are ...”  And surly the widespread accusation that masculinity is toxic is, in and of itself, part of this overreaction!  In  M97 I outlined some of the many places where our  society has been positively influenced by Judeo-Christian values. These include tolerance and respect for others, the very values that have made criticism acceptable in our culture. But they are now being turned inward and are producing what some authors call the suicide of the West.  I invite you to consider whether any of what is happening in the West, would be tolerated in non-Western cultures.  But I also invite you to consider,  if we throw it all out, what would replace it. History has something to teach us here! In the end, revolution is not change, it simply replaces one oppressed group with different one.

The Scripture commands us to honour father and mother, and to give honour to whom honour is due (Exodus 20:12; Romans 13:7). The freedom we have to criticize, is both good and bad. Free speech gives us the freedom to engage in respectful debate (Galatians 6:1). It can lead us to identify what’s bad and what’s good, so as to keep what's good, and to figure out what, and how,  to change what needs to change (Proverbs 27:17; 18:17). But criticism inevitably goes too far when it flows out of bitterness and resentment. These things defile the culture  (Hebrews 15:12).  And I have to say, from God's perspective, many of the changes are happening in the West are not good. What we have in the West is far from perfect. And we may not be where we need to be, but thank God we are not where we used to be.  

Father, we don't always understand the reason behind your commandments. But we can be sure that as the good, good Father that You are, that You always have our best interest at heart, and that the commandments are there for out provision and protection. Please help us to find the balance between heathy criticism and disrespect (Galatians 6:1), in Jesus Name Amen



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