Have you
ever wondered what might help you lead a more joyous and meaningful life?
Plato once
wrote that parents should not teach their children how to become rich—but how
to become reverent. Try as I might, however,
my nine-year-old son has not yet developed an appropriate sense of reverence.
Ant hills are for kicking. Lizards are targets for a BB gun.
Adults,
however, are not much better at being appropriately reverent than nine-year-old
boys. Just yesterday I heard an adult speak pejoratively of a cobweb in her
kitchen but reverently of the TV show, “Hell’s Kitchen.” Why is it that we
often revere the fantastically farcical but shun the incredibly sublime? Maybe
I’m crazy, but the sublimity and grace of a cobweb deserves more reverence than
a caustic TV personality.
I have a
friend who does not watch pro sports or other popular entertainment. My friend
tells me that he can’t stand the lavish attention that is given to entertainers
and athletes. When I asked him about his “stick-in the-mud” attitude, he, in
turn, asked me if I thought pop culture icons deserved their hero-like status
and huge salaries. I confessed that whether or not pop icons deserved their
salaries is beyond my ability to determine. But the reverence that we heap upon
cultural icons is not beyond my ability to critique. Our reverence for
entertainers and athletes is misplaced and out of proportion to their value to society
(consider the comparable amount of reverence that is given to teachers, nurses,
and those who serve us in restaurants).
The word
reverence comes from the Latin word, reverentia,
which means “to respect greatly.” As I survey American pop culture, I find that
we have a lot of reverence. But we often have reverence for the wrong things
and wrong people. Perhaps that is one reason why meaning and joy are, according
to polls I’ve read, in short supply. Misplaced reverence can create
an existential void.
According to
the late theologian and physician, Albert Schweitzer, “By
having a reverence for life, we enter into a spiritual relation with the world.
By practicing reverence for life we become good, deep, and alive.” Maybe that’s why so many people I know do not seem deep and alive. Maybe
that’s why our popular culture, with its vicarious living through sports heroes
and reality TV, is largely shallow and depressive.
On the other
hand, appropriately placed reverence puts us in touch with the holy of this
world. And when we are in touch with the holy of this world, we are, I believe,
in touch with The Being that creates the holy of this world. And to be in touch
with The Being is, according to statistics, to offer some measure of meaning
and joy.
So go ahead
and stare at a cobweb in your kitchen. Stop staring at your TV. You might just
find meaning and joy are not in such short supply.