The
American Dream Has Become a Nightmare
by
Pastor Paul J. Bern
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view this on my website, or for small screen viewing, click
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The
“American Dream” has at its core an escape from the real world to
build a personalized utopia, a custom-made fantasy island of sorts.
When we were taught to pursue this dream back when, we were 'taught'
that if we work hard and diligently enough we'll be able to make
enough money to buy a house in the 'right' neighborhood so our kids
go to the 'right' schools and buy enough stuff so as to please
ourselves, stay even economically with our neighbors and relatives,
and shut out the rest of the world so we can keep it all to
ourselves. But the house and our neighborhood are not the only part
of our island. Our cars and our Internet gives us the power to choose
almost everything such as where we work, or where our houses or
churches are. Not to mention who our friends are, too. Our cars allow
us to escape what we don't like about the neighborhoods we must
sometimes live in.
If
that is not enough, our TVs and our Internet connections allow us to
filter out whatever else could intrude on us. Not that we need help
to filter out what is unpleasant, the 'lame stream media' does that
for us already. All one has to do is talk to those who are from other
countries such as Yemen, Afghanistan, Libya, Syria and Israel/Gaza.
Our media protects us from the real life negative stories about what
our country and corporations do to others. In lieu of the unpleasant
truth, our media reports only that which does not interfere with our
consumption of their sponsors' products. And out of that small
selection that is left from all of this filtering, we use the remote
to choose shows based on how they make us feel. What a dumb life this
is! Ever considered turning off your cable TV and pocketing that
money each month? Thank God we have the alternative media outlets
such as Israeli News
Live, We Are
Change, SGT
Report, Jason A
and many, many other high-quality channels or websites to choose
from!
Christendom
as a whole sees this self-imposed isolation by its secular fellow
Americans as an affirmation of his own similarly withdrawn theology.
For example, I rarely see any articles or postings that call into
question the extreme immorality of waging war. In its place their
articles, Christian books and TV shows are concerned with fine
theological points, pointless evangelical arguments, how to better
manage church services, all about miracles real or imagined or
engineered, and all the while oftentimes overemphasizing fund
raising.
But
it is not just the articles that show how we distance ourselves, but
we use our gospel of individual salvation to shut out what we find
disturbing. We so reduce our standing before God – in our own eyes
– to our current state of inner self and beliefs that we become
hyper vigilant over ourselves while ignoring the needs of others. As
a result, we become agitated and even panicked when the concerns of
the world ask for our time. And it isn't just the negativity of the
news that disturbs us, it is its complexity. Since things are simple
when we only have to care for ourselves, we prefer to pay as little
attention as possible to others. The apostle Paul wrote, “we have
the mind of Christ”, but some 'Christians' aren't acting like it.
And
when we do see and respond to the suffering of others, it is only to
a chosen few fellow Christians or to those whom we cannot avoid. But
such an approach to helping others goes against what the Bible
teaches. Isaiah chapters 58 and 59 and Jeremiah 22:16 (“He
defended the cause of the poor and the needy, and so all went well.
'Is that not what it means to know me', says the Lord?”)
closely tie helping those in need with having seen the light.
Likewise, Jesus' parable of the sheep and the goats (see Matt. 25,
verses 21-46) not only taught that those who helped others in need
were the sheep who received eternal life, it also showed that those
who neglected the needy, looking after only themselves, were banished
from heaven forever! He also demonstrated this latter principle in
his parable of the rich man and Lazarus.
In
Jesus' parable of the rich man, who built extra barns to hold the
excess of his harvest and told himself to eat, drink and be merry for
tomorrow he could die – well, sure enough, he did. He begged
Lazarus from the fires of hell to give him just one drop of cool
water, but Lazarus could not. Last in my list is the book of
Proverbs, containing such tasty nuggets of wisdom as, “He who
oppresses the poor shows contempt for their Maker, but whoever is
kind to the needy honors God” (chapter 14, verse 31), and “Do
not exploit the poor because they are poor, and do not crush the
needy in court, for the Lord will take up their case and will plunder
those who plunder them” (chapter 22, verses 22-23).
But
perhaps the most pathetic way that Christians fail in their missions
of service, prayer and worship is by blindly submitting to authority.
It is not that Christians are not called to submit to those in
authority – quite the contrary! But many of today's Christians do
so as a way of shielding themselves from the risks that come with
confronting evil, such as opposing corruption and speaking truth to
power (think Rev. Dr. King, the Kennedy brothers, Huey Long, Malcolm
X, and many more like them). Submission to authority, then, is
sometimes practiced not in order to love God and others, but to
secure for oneself the kind of world that is most comfortable.
And
so when evil prevails in either the private or public sector, this
legitimate command to submit to the authorities is used to hide the
very ones who are perpetrating evil and mayhem, and especially
government and workplace corruption. But not only are we negligent in
our Christian duty when we fail to confront those who abuse their
power, we also become complicit in their evil ways. And we do so in
order to ride on the coattails of evil and power rather than risk any
reprisal for challenging it. If we as a people – regardless of
religious affiliation or the lack thereof – continue to allow
abusive and corrupt authority to run our country, we will soon lose
it forever.
Martin
Luther King faced this very dilemma when he stood up to the legalized
racism and racial hatred that was rampant in the American South. He
wanted to honor and follow the commandment in Romans 13 that told him
to submit to the authorities. At the same time, he knew that many
authorities were enforcing unjust laws while allowing abuse and even
murder. He could have submitted and just gone along with the status
quo and he would have avoided making himself a target. But that would
have been the coward's way out! Had he remained quiet, others would
have continued to suffer horribly. So King concluded that he could
meet both responsibilities by using political dissent and organized
passive resistance as forms of peaceful protest. When arrested, he
made no effort to resist. He did not challenge the authority of the
police, but he most definitely did challenge the validity of unjust
laws and the society that profited from that authority. The
institutionalized racism that Rev. Dr. King stood against exists to
this very day! What are white or Caucasian Christians doing about
this?
There
is a Biblical reason why the American Dream is so desirable to
Christians. It is because we see the American Dream as the Garden of
Eden restored and thus it's our Christian duty to make it so. In
fact, some think that the purpose of God's Word is to make Paradise
accessible again, not understanding that we who call upon the name of
the Lord are destined for a Paradise that will put the Garden of Eden
to shame. Such Christians argue that basing one's life on God's Word
is like following the right blueprints when constructing a building,
and they have a point. The more we follow God's Word, the more we can
avoid the hazards of sin. But the big question becomes, did God give
us His word to return us to the Garden or to help us through the
wilderness? But before answering that question, we must understand
why would Jesus commanded us to collect our treasures in heaven
rather than on earth, and why the writer of the book of Hebrews tells
us we are to look for a new home to come rather than a home here.
To
believe that God's Word tells us how to regain Paradise is
inaccurate, to put it nicely. By the same token, the real attraction
to the American Dream isn't the opportunity to restore what was lost
but to worship what can be found – the twin false gods of money and
materialism. The American Dream is a monasticism with benefits. Its
preachers assure us that we can be righteously selfish. The
“prosperity gospel” is taught in churches like a canned sales
pitch, and is gleefully and mistakenly received as truth by the
gullible. It allows us to flee from what is unpleasant and
distasteful in the world while enjoying its corruptible fruit. This
makes America a trap for 21st century Christians. For
when we try to take what we want instead of waiting on God, we become
deaf and blind to both the world God wants us to share His love with,
as well as our own depleted spiritual conditions.
My
conclusion, then, is to reject materialism and the pursuit of
economic gain! Jesus said, “One cannot serve two masters. He/she
will either love one and despise the other, or cling to one while
rejecting the other. You cannot serve both God and mammon
(materialism)”. Choose today whom or what you will serve in life.
You can either pursue wealth and material goods, or you can pursue a
personal relationship with Jesus Christ and all that goes with it.
There is so much more to choosing Christ than there is to choosing
riches, which can be here one day and gone the next without warning.
One cannot serve them both, since from the vantage point of the
believer they are in opposite directions from each other.
Our
wealth and possessions die with us or are willed to others after we
are gone, but Jesus Christ lives today, tomorrow, and forever! It is
He and he alone that is the correct choice for us to make. It is
Christ alone who offers us the eternal salvation our souls urgently
need. Right now would be a perfectly good time to do this (for those
readers who haven't already done so). Simply pray within yourself to
Jesus and ask Him to take charge of your life. It doesn't matter how
you surrender to him, just do it. He always does a perfect job
anyway, so there is no profit in resisting him. Ask Jesus now, he is
waiting eagerly for you! And he loves you unconditionally!
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