The bible asks ”who art thou o man?” It goes on to answer it’s own question by saying ”thou art as the grass that withers. Thou art as the flower that fadeth. A man that is born of woman, that is today and that tomorrow is no more”. One would have thought that this divine assertion, more than any other, would have humbled those that play God and those that believe that their hold on power will last forever but clearly this is not so.
Regardless of all, men in power hardly ever learn that such power is temporary and ephemeral. So carnal, worldly and obsessed are they with their brief moment of glory and strength that they forget that before God they are nothing, They forget that the bible says, ”the kingdoms are as a drop of water in the ocean before Him” and that ”the earth is His footstool”. Nothing lasts and nothing can stand against the power of God or His counsel. As the lawyers say ”this is trite law”. He alone rules in the affairs of men and forges the destiny of nations. And woe unto him or her that sits in judgement against his fellow human being and that does so lightly without any recourse to decency and justice and without a healthy regard and respect for truth.
Yet despite the veracity of these truisms we still have so much to learn. There are a few questions that are often asked. Amongst them are the following. Why do men not fear God? Why are they so eager and ready to write-off others? Why are they so eager to assume the worst? Why is it that human beings are so fickle and sensitive to what others think about them? Why does reputation and the perception of others mean everything to most whilst substance and character means nothing? Why are men so forgetful of the past, why are they so moved by the present and why do they fail to consider what the future may hold? Why are human beings so ready, and even eager, to write off their fellow human beings at the drop of the hat and why do men like to play God? What are the answers to these deep philosophical inquiries and how do we, as believers in and followers of Our Lord Jesus Christ, approach such issues. The purpose of this short contribution is to answer some of these deep questions.
As times and seasons change, so do the thoughts of mortals and lesser men. Yesterday’s heroes become today’s villains and today’s villains become tomorrow’s heroes. Men worship the powerful and mighty and those that have been blessed with good fortune yet they despise and pour scorn and contempt on those that have fallen by the wayside and those that appear to have no future and no tomorrow. Yet the bible says “rejoice not my enemy that I have fallen, for I shall rise again”. It says “if the princes of this world had known they would not have crucified the Lord of glory”. It says “who is he that sayest a thing and it cometh to pass when the Lord God of Hosts has commanded it not?” It says “who can lay a charge before God’s elect?Is it not Christ that justifies?”. What people think of others or what men call “reputation” means nothing before God. For He looks at the heart of a man and He alone knows whether that man is truly good or evil. And once He has determined to do so He will lift up that man no matter how far he has fallen and no matter how bad his “reputation” is or once was. If this were not so Saul ,the greatest persecutor and killer of believers, would not have become Paul, the greatest of all the christian Apostles. If this were not so David the murderer and adulterer and the young boy who was only fit to look after the sheep would not have become the greatest of all the Kings of Israel and “a man after God’s heart,” If this were not so Moses, the murderer, would not have become the father of Israel and the great Prophet of God that confronted and overcame Pharaoh, that parted the Red sea and that led the children of Israel into the Promise land. If this were not so Jacob, the thief and crooked deceiver, would not have been re-named Israel the great and would not have been a man so blessed, so loved and so favoured by the Living God. If this were not so Abraham, the liar and doubter of God’s promise, would not have become the father of faith and the father of many nations.
A man with the greatest and best reputation may fall and be brought down by God tomorrow and a man with the worst reputation may rise up and be lifted up by God the very next day. It follows that one should not place too much value or reliance on “good fortune” and a “good reputation” or on the wonderful things that men say and think about you lest you may be taken by surprise when your circumstances change. This is because your “good fortune” may suddenly fly away and when it does the very same people that you once believed loved you and who graciously bestowed on you such a “good reputation” will begin to criticise, condemn, hate, persecute, villify, demonise and write you off as if you never existed. And by the same token NEVER underestimate or write-off another man no matter how much ill-luck fate appears to have brought his way and no matter how bad or hideous his reputation may appear to be because God may choose to suddenly restore him, favour him, use him and cause him to rule or have power over you, your family or your nation one day. Finally if you want to understand human psychology and mob mentality and if you really want to appreciate just how fickle men and women can be when it comes to loving someone one minute and hating them the next, or hating someone one minute and loving them the next, find the time to read Shakespeare’s “Julius Caesar” and consider the behaviour of the Roman mob after they heard Mark Anthony’s great and passionate speech. Initially they were with Brutus and the murderers of Caesar and they gave them all their hearts. Yet ten minutes later after Mark Anthony’s passionate and moving words were unleashed on them and after he stirred up the fond memories of the great Caesar and reminded them of his kindness, love, compassion and generosity, that same mob set on Brutus, Cassius and the other kingslayers and were ready to burn them alive. So fickle is man and so shallow and predictable are his ways. He is, like the biblical Reuben, ”as unstable as water”.
A clear understanding of such “mob mentality” is deep wisdom indeed and with that you will learn never to trust men with their ephemeral, vain, self-serving, self-indulgent and temporary sentiments and expressions of love and hate. For like the Roman mob they often change like the wind and that without warning. That is why the bible says “cursed is the man that relies on the arm of flesh” and I would go a step further by saying “troubled is the man that worries about what other men think or say about him”. It is what God thinks and says about you that matters and He alone knows the future and end of each and everyone of us. He alone sees our hearts. He alone lifts up and pulls down. He alone has the power to turn beggars into kings and to turn kings into beggars. He alone determines the seasons of life and He alone understands the deep wisdom that is captured in these few words…..that both good and bad times always eventually come to an end and that, like the flowing river and the sands of time, everyone and everything has it’s time and it’s season. God alone is constant. God alone is true.