A
Shuffled Deck
Life
is like
a game of cards. We have to work with what we’re dealt.
But
what
happens if we make up the rules as we go along? What if we assume that
there is
no real order or purpose to the shuffled deck of circumstance?
Questions
like these were raised in 1990, when American educator and cultural
critic
(1931-2003) Neil Postman made an important address to the German
Informatics
Society. His speech was titled “Informing Ourselves To Death.”
Postman
talked about the dangers of a society where the pursuit of information
is
separated from a shared sense of spiritual and social order.
To
illustrate his point, Postman talked about the difference between
dealing from
a new deck of cards as it is taken out of the box and then doing the
same with
one that had been shuffled 20 times. The new deck presents the cards in
a
predictable order. Once the deck has been shuffled several times, there
is no
reason to react with disbelief or surprise to whatever card turns up.
Postman’s
point was that information that is not rooted in a consistent view of
life
becomes like a shuffled deck of cards. He explains, “In a world without
spiritual or intellectual order, nothing is unbelievable; nothing is
predictable, and therefore, nothing comes as a particular surprise.”
Like a
voice in the wilderness, Postman declares, “We no longer have a
coherent
conception of ourselves, and our universe, and our relation to one
another and
our world. We no longer know . . . where we come from, and where we are
going,
or why . . . . As a consequence, our defenses against information glut
have
broken down; our information immune system is inoperable. We don’t know
how to
filter it out; we don’t know how to reduce it; we don’t know [how] to
use it.
We suffer from a kind of cultural AIDS.”
Knowledge
Without Roots
Neil
Postman’s “Informing Ourselves To Death” describes not only the dangers
of our
present information-based culture but of our past as well. The opening
chapters
of Genesis tell how our first parents “informed themselves to death” by
turning
their backs on the moral order of their Creator to go after a kind of
knowledge
that ruined their lives.
In the
middle of the growing confusion, some in every generation have looked
for the
“spiritual or intellectual order” that Postman talked about. In pursuit
of
practical answers, some have turned to the wisdom of a man named
Solomon.
The
Wisdom of Solomon
According
to
the Bible, God gave the third king of Israel an unusual capacity for
wisdom and
knowledge (1 Kings 4:29-34).
Solomon
became a collector of proverbs. His thirst for knowledge was
unquenchable. He
had the curiosity of a scientist when it came to plants and animals (1
Kings
4:32-34). Leaders from all over the world came to hear his wisdom for
themselves (1 Kings 10:22-24).
Even
in the
midst of unparalleled wealth and prosperity, Solomon would later write
that the
wisdom God gives is worth more than gold (Proverbs 3:13-18).
The
Foolishness of Solomon
Ironically,
over time Solomon ignored the counsel of the God who had given him
power and
wisdom (Deuteronomy 17:14-20). While multiplying personal wealth and
wives, he
indulged himself at the expense of those he was to serve. He even built
altars
to pagan gods on the hills surrounding Israel (1 Kings 11:1-11).
Late
in
life, Solomon wrote a short book that showed the deterioration of his
mind. His
thoughts had become like a shuffled deck of cards. His wisdom was mixed
with
despair. Until he recovered a healthy fear of God, he had no consistent
way of
evaluating success, failure, or even the significance of life itself
(Ecclesiastes 12:1-7).
The
Wisdom of Jesus
Solomon’s
failures can help us understand the importance of Jesus.
Jesus,
like
Solomon, is remembered for His wisdom. Unlike Solomon, however,
everything
Jesus said and did reflected a consistent view of reality.
What
really
makes Jesus important to us is that He didn’t just give us words of
wisdom.
According to the apostle Paul, Jesus became the wisdom of God for us (1
Corinthians 1:30).
What
did
Paul mean when he said Jesus became wisdom for us? Was it that Jesus
became our
example of all that is good? Was it that His story gives us the
ultimate
answers to where we came from, where we are going, and why?
Paul’s
own
answer shows that Jesus did more than give us spiritual inspiration and
answers
to our moral questions. He wrote that Jesus, in addition to becoming
wisdom for
us, also became our “righteousness and sanctification and redemption.”
He did
all of this, Paul said, so that our confidence could be based on what
Jesus did
for us, rather than on what we could do for ourselves (vv.30-31).
In a
second
letter, Paul further explains that, to reconcile us to God, Jesus even
became
sin for us. So the apostle wrote, “He [God] made Him [Jesus] who knew
no sin to
be sin for us, that we might become the righteousness of God in Him” (2
Corinthians 5:21).
This
is how
Jesus became our wisdom. He offered Himself as the practical answer to
the
dilemma our first parents created when they sold their soul for “the
knowledge
of good and evil.” At the price of His own death, Jesus bought the
right to
offer life beyond the grave to anyone who would trust Him.
Why
would He
do it for us? Because, in the ultimate sense, Jesus is like an
unshuffled deck
of cards. All order, design, and purpose begin and end in Him. As our
Creator,
Judge, and Savior, He alone can call us back to the knowledge we’ve
lost when
He says, “I am the way, the truth, and the life. No one comes to the
Father
except through Me” (John 14:6).
And so we
pray, Father in heaven, forgive us for thinking of Your Son only as our
example
or our teacher. Help us to see Him as the root of all true answers, the
Savior
who pursues us, and the One who, to show Your love, became wisdom for
us.