Imagine 25 squares, all
coloured blue. They are laid out on a sheet of paper in five rows, each with
five squares. The question is asked as to which one of the boxes is a different
shade of blue. So you gaze at them, wondering which one it is, but it is not at
all obvious. This is a serious test and the point is that in one culture people
find it hard to spot the different box, yet in another it is easy to do so. The
difference is that in one culture they have a different word for each of the
different shades of blue, whilst in the other they do not. The test has been
used to prove that our perception is shaped by our language. What we see, and
indeed how we perceive it, is limited or expanded by what language we have to
understand and describe what we see. All this might seem improbable, but it
became very obvious to me when we travelled deep inside the Arctic Circle last
year. What was the weather like? It was gloriously sunny and there was ice and
snow everywhere. But were you to ask a member of the Sami people the same
question, you would get a very different answer. They have 180 different words
for ice and snow. The landscape they look at the same as that at which I am
looking. Yet most of what they see is beyond my perception. The same issue of
perception struck me as I photographed the Northern Lights. Photography brings
out much deeper and richer colours that we could see with the naked eye, yet
locals can actually see those deep and rich colours. Their eyes are not better,
but their culture has the language to describe this incredible display.
Language affects perception and shapes the way we process what is going into
and through our brains.
‘Austerity’
is a culture that shapes our perception of society. Within that culture there
is a sharp logic, against which it is difficult to argue. We cannot spend more
than we earn. We cannot live beyond our means. We cannot allow debt to be the
legacy we leave for our children. So the supply of money needs to be controlled
and budgets sliced to reduce spending. Success will be measured in terms of the
balance sheets. Within the bubble of that perception all else ceases to be part
of what we see as being the measure of reality. So austerity goes on. Yet from
a different perspective the wellbeing of our society looks very different. A recent
television program looked at the workings of a head and neck cancer unit in an
NHS hospital. Underfunded and understaffed, the whole unit was at the point of
collapse and one of the two consultants had announced he was leaving. His wife
lived in America where he could earn more, treat fewer patients and treat them
to a far higher standard of care. He loved his work, but the pressures of
working in the NHS had left him utterly exhausted. It is one story, but the
whole of the NHS is a breaking point, which means that a bad winter in eight
months’ time may well prove to be the collapsing point. Cutting budgets,
services and staff is leaving its toll. People are overworked, receiving wages
which no longer keep up with inflation, and find themselves undervalued and
demoralized in their work. I was in hospital over Christmas. I spoke to one
nurse who, the previous day had started at 7.30am in a twelve hour shift. The
first break she had had of any kind had been at 4.30pm. When I asked her how
she coped, she said she had gone home and sat in a dark room for an hour before
she could face anything else. The same crises can be seen in so many areas of
our lives. Last week it was said that the legal system is on the point of
collapse and we are reaching a point at which justice will no longer seed to be
done. Cases are collapsing when not enough time is available to process
evidence properly. In the field of education, it has been suggested that a
staggering percentage of teachers want to leave the profession, but are trapped
doing a job they no longer want to do. In the police it is now common to find
all specialist units scrapped to focus resources on beat officers, yet those
officers now have to work without the kind of specialist backup on which they
once relied. The list could go on and on. The key narrative is that books must
balance, money must be saved and productivity must be increased. Achieve that and
the politicians can pat themselves on the back at their stunning success. But
such a perception is blinkered. It fails to see the human cost, both in terms
of individual lives and the sustainable structure and wellbeing of society as a
whole.
Christianity does not provide neat and easy
answers to these different bubbles of perception. Yet it does provide a
different narrative which results in a radically different perspective. Imagine
a world in which it was not the richest or most successful who called the
shots, but rather a world in which everything is seen as falling under the
sovereignty of the Divine. Imagine a world in which every person becomes the
neighbour whose needs we must meet, a world in which a radical inclusion has
replaced the naked tribalism that so typifies almost every aspect of existence,
including the life of the Church. Imagine a world in which each of us sees, in
every person we meet, a person of such value that Christ gave his life for
them. This world is our perception. It is what Jesus called the Kingdom of
Heaven and each and every day we pray that this kingdom, already established,
may dawn on earth as it is in heaven. The Church’s task is to so live that
dream that it becomes a reality in every corner of life. Rather than fighting
over matters of doctrine (which is so beloved by the Church and which always
ends up in a dysfunctional tribalism), living with the exuberant joy of the
kingdom, in a way that celebrates the sublime depths of what it means to be a
human being, is how we will both share the richness of our experience and
present to the world a different perception of what is reality. We have a
narrative which can radically alter the perception of how life is, of how relationships
matter and of how transfigured living can be experienced through those
relationships. It is a narrative which is not so much to be defended in the
arena of public debate as to be lived out with a passion that wells up from ourhearts and finds practical expression in the rich kaleidoscope of renewed
lives. It is not an answer to austerity, as if we were engaging in that
particular language game, but the living out of a language so different that it
utterly shifts the way we look at our world. To live like that is to become the
herald of a new age that is already staring us in the face, if only we had the
eyes to see it. To live like that, with boldness and conviction, is to become a
community that is being shaped into something new, that was always there, but
which is coming to birth in our world as something that is pure gift.
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