Six weeks ago, I flew back from a Hearing God retreat in Seattle. I sat next to a young man—thirty-ish—who was returning home from a job interview. He scoffed at the interview process, saying he was interrogated by a bunch of “suits.”
“Suits?” I asked, “Surely no one actually wore a coat and tie.”
“Naw, they were just puffed up buffoons, hot air balloons, all show and no substance.”
We talked more about his life. He started college studying English, but his professors were idiots, so he dropped out. He currently worked at Lowes stocking shelves, but his passion is stories. He was even writing one. He thought he could help a computer gaming company in Seattle with his plots and characters. But those interviewers didn’t really “get” him.
He jeered at the airplane coffee because it was only Starbucks, not “real” gourmet; he turned down the snack because it wasn’t gluten free; he scoffed at my Surface Book laptop because it wasn’t a Mac; and he ridiculed the movies because they were all “make-a-buck” sequels.
The Sneer
Adam and Eve enslaved the entire human race when the fell for Satan’s sneer. Satan’s first words were, “Did God actually say you shall not eat of any tree in the garden?” He wasn’t looking for information. He was sneering and inviting Eve to join him. His question was a jeer: “What kind of God would prohibit that? Really? Yikes!”
They fell for a smirk. We too get shut-down merely by a jeer. When Christian kids go off to college and lose their faith, it’s never because they heard a well-reasoned argument against theism; it’s because they cowered under a chortle:
- “You seem a smart kid. Do you really believe in a God who let the holocaust happen?”
- Professor Bultmann once said, “It is impossible to use electric lights and the wireless … and at the same time to believe in the New Testament world of spirits and miracles.”
I want to say, “Really? You mean, God could exist if stone age man never invented the wheel, but once modern man invented a light switch, it killed him? The radio is your proof of no God?” (Sometimes we just have to be cynical about the world’s cynicism.)
Sneers and sarcasm never engage in discussion. They just look down from their lofty heights of arrogance. By dehumanizing anyone who disagrees—and with no reasonable conversation or cause—they despise everyone else.
The Downward Spiral of The Jeer
The first verse of the book of psalms describes the downward- regression of evil: it begins by “walking in the counsel of wicked,” and soon it “stands in the way of sinners,” and it ends up “sitting in the seat of scoffers.”
This perfectly describes the world we live in. We began by listening to the “common sense” worldly wisdom to solve our problems; soon we participate in the godless way of life (not necessarily atheistic, just deist, like God doesn’t matter); and we end up scoffing and sneering.
We’re cynical. As ten-year old kids, we loved the zoo. By the time we’re fifteen we jeer at those gullible kids fascinated by striped horses. As we grow older, we snicker at people who drink Folgers coffee, we chuckle at folks who eat at Big Boys, and we disdain movies with a happy ending. We’re too smart for all that.
We are derisive, critical, and sarcastic about the world. We don’t write a book, volunteer at a charity, or take an entry-level job. Instead, we mock authors who write “half-assed” books and laugh at friends who are becoming “suits.”
We all fall for the jeer, and we all look down on others. As I inwardly considered that young man on the plane, I felt my face begin to form a sneer. I was smirking! G. K. Chesterton once wrote,
The world will never starve for want of wonders; but only for want of wonder.
The only cure for my sneering nature is to wonder, to wonder at a God who would choose me, a scoffing cynic, to be his very own treasures, flawed as I am. Because he did choose me, and you: not because we were good, nice, smart, or successful. He chose us simply because he loves us.
It kind of makes me wonder.
Sam
P. S. God is the good Father who wants to enter into a divine dialogue with each one of his kids. To grow in that divine dialogue, please watch the video bel0w (Is hearing God normal?), and buy a copy of Hearing God in Conversation.
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James Meer
Sam, thanks again for your thoughts of wonder! I am so loved by God when He uses His children like you to communicate to me what I need to know (actually in this very moment) about how to treat my own brother. Jim Meer
Beliefs of the Heart
I love your line, “How to treat my own brother.” Alas, me too! Thanks.
Cheryl Brumbaugh Williams
This is the 2 of God’s 1-2 punch to my cynicism. Just last night I caught my breath and felt my stomach drop when I realized that here, during our beautiful trip to Asheville NC, I was finding constant fault with a myriad of details. I couldn’t name it then, but this gives insight and words to the root of my discomfort. Perfect timing. Thank you.
Beliefs of the Heart
Thanks for your honesty. It’s funny. I was writing an article about that young man’s criticism, and I found myself criticizing him. ARGH! God free me from this spirit of judgment.
Sharon Sartell
Sneers…right up there with a need to always be right. Read this week that ‘unless my righteousness exceeds that of the Pharisees’ and I realized God doesn’t ask me to be right so that I sneer at others. Righteousness and Pharisees…thoughts together seemed like an oxymoron until God set me straight and revealed my heart. God is so good!
Beliefs of the Heart
Christianity is not what we expect. When God convicts me of sin, I still find some joy in my heart … that God spoke to me. Even conviction from God is good!
Randy
Our bro CS Lewis describes the sneer.
The Tousle Headed Poet in chpts 1 & 2 of The Great Divorce.
Lord Feverstone in That Hideous Strength.
Flippancy in The Great Divorce.
I wanted to pepper my comment with a plethora quotes & hyperlinks. But any reader can do that for themselves, to much better effect.
Beliefs of the Heart
Thanks! Those great.
Lori
Thanks Sam, for an excellent and insightful/convicting article. Always appreciate your well-articulated thoughts!
Beliefs of the Heart
And you are always so encouraging.
Stephen Foltz
Ouch! The cynicism that we find so predominate in our thoughts (because we all find fault, either silently or vocally) with perfect strangers, is rooted in pride. Could this be the sin the writer says clings so closely in Hebrews 12:1?
Beliefs of the Heart
I find it clings so closely to me.
And why do we find fault in others? Partly because it’s obvious (to us, not them; and our faults obvious to them not us). I think it still is a deep insecurity; we doubt the love of God.
John DeWitt
Did you realllly think an article you wrote could convict me of being cynical?
Yep. Mea coupa.
Thanks, Sam, for cutting to the core once again.
Blessings to you and your family as we prepare for Our Savior’s coming.
John
Beliefs of the Heart
It takes one to know one! 🙂
Paul Beckman
Excellent exposé of what is truly one of our modern epidemics. I can feel the symptoms even as I write …
Beliefs of the Heart
Yeah, I feel so many symptoms I think I’ve been fully infected.