The Tower, the Wind, and Murphy
The Tower, the Wind, and Murphy
June 4, 2006
Genesis 11/Acts 2
Once upon a time there were three little pigs.
... We'll ignore the first two pigs, because
their houses weren't up to code, anyway.
But the third little pig ... Ah, the third little
pig was an engineer. So he built a huge home
using computer-aided design, and lots of
reinforced concrete. There were many plate glass
windows, but they were triple-glazed, and
especially hardened. There fibre optics in all
the walls and high speed Internet available in
every room, and all the lights ... could be
turned on and off ... by clapping.... [*/*] He
built his big house overlooking Lake Roosevelt.
He made it earthquake-proof and installed an
alarm system and retained the services of a
professional security company; and he bought
insurance.--insurance against every possible
disaster. And he said to his soul, "Soul, you
have ample goods laid up for many years; relax,
eat, drink, and be merry. I'm in control!"
Now the wolf was no slouch, either. He also was
an engineer. He built a wind machine and blew up
a thousand-mile-per-hour wind, strong enough to
blow the whole world ... right off the face of
the earth. (I admit I got this line from a Mickey
Mouse comic book.) Naturally it destroyed the
pig's reinforced concrete house, and the little
pig was unfortunately killed by a flying cell
phone. The wolf felt sad, but he ate the pig
anyway.
Of course that's not the way we usually tell the
story. We want the little pig to be in control of
his own destiny, outwitting the wolf by his
cleverness. We never want to believe the wolf
might be in control. If the little pig stands for
us, it means we're in control. And that reminds
me of a story from the Bible:
Once upon a time the whole earth had one language
and the same words. And the people said, "Come,
let us build ourselves a city, and a tower with a
top no one can see, and let us make a name for
ourselves." ... They wanted to be in control, of
course. They wanted to have security. They wanted
to control their own futures. And to do this they
trusted in technology, science, architecture,
engineering, building. And they called what they
were doing "progress."
But God came down and threw a monkey wrench into
their construction project. Before long the
masons had developed a jargon that was different
from the lingo of the carpenters, and the
plumbers couldn't talk to the electricians. The
ones who could read blueprints couldn't
understand flow charts, and the ones who
understood flowcharts couldn't do spreadsheets.
It was as if the wind of God had blown them into
the four corners of the world, where they cowered
in little tribes and learned to chip flints and
make grass huts. And none of them had the
illusion of being in control. [And that reminds
me of a story:
Once upon a time the whole nation had one
language and the same words. And the people said,
"Come, let us build ourselves an iron curtain the
whole length of the Rio Grande River, and keep
out the riffraff who don't talk like us." They
wanted to be in control, of course. They wanted
to trust technology, engineering, architecture,
weapons. And they called what they were doing
"security." Listen! ... Do you hear the sound of
a giant wind machine revving up? ...] And that
reminds me of a story:
Once upon a time people had the same law and only
a few interpreters. And they said, "Come, let us
build ourselves an organization, and a
bureaucracy no one can figure out, and let us
make a name for ourselves." ... They wanted to be
in control, of course. They wanted to have
security. They wanted to control their own
futures. To do this they invented legalism and
old-boy networks. They wanted to trust priests
and Levites and scribes and Pharisees. And they
called what they were doing "religion."
But God came down like a fresh breeze,
overturning their tables and challenging their
interpretations. They killed God, of course. God
was interfering with their control. But somehow
God came back, with the sound of a mighty wind,
and tongues that looked like fire, and a miracle
of languages, and called together all the tribes
of the earth, bringing them into one house not
made with hands, baptizing them into one name and
one family. And God was, surprise, surprise, in
control.
Here at the beginning of the twenty-first
century, we are more concerned with control, more
hung up on security than any people before us. We
have central heating and air-conditioning. We
have life insurance, health insurance, car
insurance, credit card insurance. We have
pensions and social security and Medicare. Well,
sort of. We have burglar alarms and smoke
detectors and machines to X-ray jetliner wings.We
have Star Wars guided missiles and daisy-cutter
bombs. We have vaccinations and blood banks and
child-proof medicine bottle caps. We can replace
coronary arteries, and make artificial knees. We
have a constitution and political parties and a
Bill of Rights. We have the press to watch the
government, and watchdog organizations watching
the press, and online bloggers watching the
watchdogs. And we resent it, with lawsuits, if
anything happens to make it seem that we really
don't have complete control.
But we don't. We don't really have control. And
deep down inside we know we don't.
We can't control the sub-atomic particles that
make up everything there is. There seems to be an
underlying principle at work that says these
things are beyond our control.
We can't control the weather. There seems to be
an underlying principle at work that says the
weather is beyond our control.
We can't control the younger generation. Would
you have believed thirty years ago that someone
like [Bart Simpson?] could be a role model? There
seems to be an underlying principle at work....
[OR - We can't control our own military. Would
you have believed five years ago that America
would torture prisoners, lock people up for years
without a trial, defy international prisoner of
war treaties?]
[We can't stop illegal drugs; we can't stop
illegal aliens; we can't stop terrorism; we can't
even stop Iraq from spiraling out of control.]
We are uncomfortably aware that we aren't really
in control. There's even an expression to
describe this. We call it ... Murphy's Law.
Anything that can happen will happen. Anything
that can go wrong will go wrong. Grandma called
it "The Butter-Side Down Rule." Cheops discovered
this law while he was building the world's
largest pyramid 4500 years ago. Cheops' Law says
every project takes four times as long and
costs twice as much. But we'll just call it
Murphy's Law. Anything that can go wrong will
go wrong.
We refer to our lack of control as Murphy's Law.
But I think Murphy actually represents God!
Murphy may be God's middle name. In fact, one of
my Internet friends says that there is an Irish
curse word, "Jesus Murphy!" Murphy may be God's
middle name.
I'm the kind of person who likes to be in
control. I get very nervous about drinking
alcohol, because I might not be in control. I get
very nervous when I drive fast because I feel I
might not be in control. I get very nervous
around other people who act out of control. I try
to keep my watch accurate to less than a minute.
I try to keep every event written on my calendar.
I try to get the sermon ready by Thursday. I'm
thinking about getting suspenders to wear with my
belt. I like to be in control.
But Murphy says, I mean, God says, "Surprise,
you're not in control!" And the wind of change
begins to blow. It has a very hollow, frightening
sound. Whoooo-o-o!
I say, Trust in technology. God says, Open yourself to art.
I believe in progress. God offers newness.
I believe in pride, school spirit.
God offers humility, the Holy Spirit.
I want answers. God offers questions.
I want power. God's
power is made perfect in weakness.
I want control. God offers self-control.
I want security. God offers adventure.
I want to be organized. God works through chaos.
I want to buy insurance. God offers faith.
I listen to the claims of science.
God offers the warnings of Murphy.
A new science has arisen in the last 20 or 30
years. It's called Chaos Theory. It's kind of an
attempt to understand that which is unknowable.
Sounds a lot like theology!
One of the new discoveries of Chaos Theory is
something called the "Butterfly Effect." Certain
chaos systems (weather is one) have different
choice points where a tiny influence becomes
magnified over time. For instance, a butterfly
could flap its wings in Hong Kong. Six months
later there could result a hurricane in New
Orleans. Or a terrible flood in [North Dakota.]
The butterfly effect.
And that's how God works, with power made perfect
by weakness. A condemned criminal is hung on a
cross, executed by the government, and buried in
a borrowed tomb. Seven weeks later the wind of
Pentecost begins to blow. And 2000 years later
the church of Jesus Christ surrounds the earth,
one billion strong, flexing muscles to change the
world.
The Spirit of God. The People of God. Sometimes
we seem no more powerful than a butterfly's wing.
A one-millionth-of-a mile-per-hour wind. But no
tower can stand against us. The gates of Hades
cannot stand against us. The Spirit of God blows
apart the powerful and blows together the weak.
The government is not in control. Satan is not in
control. We are not in control....
God ... is in control!