What Vulnerability Creates

I have been thoroughly enjoying Richard Beck lately. I read his book on the Slavery of Death and found it to be challenging and compelling. He discusses at length the linkage between vulnerability, understanding our frailty, embracing our mortality and the possibility of love marking our relationships. Check out what he has to say.

โ€œNotice in Acts 4 that there were โ€œno needy persons among them.โ€ Why? Because they shared with โ€œanyone one who had need.โ€ The expression of neediness in the community allowed the economy of love to flow. But in churches in America and other places where affluence poses special problems, the situation is very different. These cultures are enslaved to the fear of death and death avoidance holds serious sway. In these cultures the expression of need is taboo and pornographic. What results is neurotic image-management, the pressure to be โ€œfine.โ€ The perversity here is that on the surface American churches do look like the church in Acts 4 โ€“ there are โ€œno needy personsโ€ among us. We all appear to be doing just fine, thank you very much.

But we know this to be a sham, a collective delusion driven by the fear of death. Iโ€™m really not fine and neither are you. But you are afraid of me and Iโ€™m afraid of you. We are neurotic about being vulnerable with each other. We fear exposing our need and failure to each other. And because of this fear โ€“ the fear of being needy within a community of neediness โ€“ the witness of the church is compromised. A collection of self-sustaining and self-reliant people โ€“ people who are all pretending to be fine โ€“ is not the Kingdom of God. Itโ€™s a church built upon the delusional anthropology we described earlier. Specifically, a church where everyone is โ€œfineโ€ is a group of humans refusing to be human beings and pretending to be gods. Such a โ€œchurchโ€ is comprised of fearful people working hard to keep up appearances and unable to trust each other to the point of loving self-sacrifice. In such a โ€œchurchโ€ each member is expected to be self-sufficient and self-sustaining, thus making no demands upon others. Unfortunately, where there is no need and no vulnerability, there can be no love.โ€

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