All through history we have seen innumerable stories of slavery, human oppression and injustice. Powerful people elevating themselves to a higher plane, throwing their weight around and lording over those who are inferior in some human parameter. We have studied about Britain ruling a large part of the globe colonising people and subjecting the natives to untold misery and hardship. We have studied about the blacks taken to America as slaves to work in the farm lands of the white and the rest is history. There is a basic instinct in creation where the superior lords over the inferior, the strong rule over the weak, the rich over the poor and the moneyed over the pennyless.
In an Indian context we can see it even today in various ways. The moneyed engage the muscular and the muscular become moneyed in the process. Together they are a deadly collaboration which becomes what we call as the 'mafia' on a larger scale. Sometimes these forces exploit the victims, grab their wealth, control an area, an industry, a government and a whole economy too. In extreme cases they even take it across international borders. In Indian parlance it is called as 'dadagiri'. This complex gets aggravated by another social evil linkage called as the "varnashramadharma' which classifies people into a social hierarchy called the 'caste' system. In this evil system which appears to be superficially not so harsh, the rich and the high castes ensure that they remain in their social pedestals by oppressing the poor low caste. The deep truth is that the victims are physically, socially and psychologically driven to feel utterly worthless and they resign to it thinking it is their 'fate'. The worst forms of injustice, oppression and demonic dehumanisation is what we see as a result of such evil forces even today in a post modern age.
This uncontrollable desire to rule and to be high handed is what we call as the "god complex". The powered have a god complex over the powerless and bask in the glory of being looked upto. The flip side is that the weak readily subject themselves to the strong, mainly out of fear of the powered overpowering them as they are powerless. Once the powered extend a favour, the favoured are entrapped into a life long obligation of servitude to the one who favoured him. The benefactor establishes his lordship over the beneficiary to create an obligatory chasm. This, over time has become a culturally indispensable scenario especially in the developing world and the victims of this malady are the poor and the powerless. The moneyed and powered oppressors deliberately keep the poor unempowered in order to maintain their powered status.
It was this god complex that was there in the Romans who ruled Judea at the time of Jesus. The Jews having been through such waves of oppressions over time in history cried out to a God who seemed silent for more than four hunderd years after Malachi the prophet had spoken. They longed for a Messiah who will come, overpower the Romans, dethrone Caesar and establish a kingdom more powerful and just. It is in this context that Jesus was born in a very insignificant town called Bethlehem. But His arrival was not the kind that the jews expected. Contrary to all their expectation of a powerful Messiah, He came as a babe in swaddling clothes. He lived among ordinary people and ate with sinners. He healed the broken hearted, healed the sick, raised the dead and talked about a kingdom with values far different and much higher than the kingdoms of the world. Some find it hard to understand it even today and are lost. He came not as any other highhanded ruler, 'dada' or a thug, but as a meek individual riding on a donkey.
As we go through this season of lent it will be expedient for us to reflect on the fact that Jesus did not come down with a god complex. But He laid it all aside and came down in humble obedience to His Father's will in human form, lived a sinless life, showed the path to eternal life and finally surrendered himself to be utterly abandoned into sinful human hands to be murdered cruelly on the cross - a symbol of curse. Surely he took up our infirmities and carried our sorrows, yet we considered him stricken by God, smitten by him, and afflicted (Isaiah 53:4). He did it cause we are precious to him and He loves us so much. As he emptied himself in total surrender even to the point of death on a cruel cross, the Father was well pleased to give him a name above all names that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow.
Is a god complex lurking in us somewhere? The more we are stuck to our god complexes the more complex it becomes for God to work in us. What are we willing to let go during this lent? Jesus let go everything for us. He deserves the glory !!
In an Indian context we can see it even today in various ways. The moneyed engage the muscular and the muscular become moneyed in the process. Together they are a deadly collaboration which becomes what we call as the 'mafia' on a larger scale. Sometimes these forces exploit the victims, grab their wealth, control an area, an industry, a government and a whole economy too. In extreme cases they even take it across international borders. In Indian parlance it is called as 'dadagiri'. This complex gets aggravated by another social evil linkage called as the "varnashramadharma' which classifies people into a social hierarchy called the 'caste' system. In this evil system which appears to be superficially not so harsh, the rich and the high castes ensure that they remain in their social pedestals by oppressing the poor low caste. The deep truth is that the victims are physically, socially and psychologically driven to feel utterly worthless and they resign to it thinking it is their 'fate'. The worst forms of injustice, oppression and demonic dehumanisation is what we see as a result of such evil forces even today in a post modern age.
This uncontrollable desire to rule and to be high handed is what we call as the "god complex". The powered have a god complex over the powerless and bask in the glory of being looked upto. The flip side is that the weak readily subject themselves to the strong, mainly out of fear of the powered overpowering them as they are powerless. Once the powered extend a favour, the favoured are entrapped into a life long obligation of servitude to the one who favoured him. The benefactor establishes his lordship over the beneficiary to create an obligatory chasm. This, over time has become a culturally indispensable scenario especially in the developing world and the victims of this malady are the poor and the powerless. The moneyed and powered oppressors deliberately keep the poor unempowered in order to maintain their powered status.
It was this god complex that was there in the Romans who ruled Judea at the time of Jesus. The Jews having been through such waves of oppressions over time in history cried out to a God who seemed silent for more than four hunderd years after Malachi the prophet had spoken. They longed for a Messiah who will come, overpower the Romans, dethrone Caesar and establish a kingdom more powerful and just. It is in this context that Jesus was born in a very insignificant town called Bethlehem. But His arrival was not the kind that the jews expected. Contrary to all their expectation of a powerful Messiah, He came as a babe in swaddling clothes. He lived among ordinary people and ate with sinners. He healed the broken hearted, healed the sick, raised the dead and talked about a kingdom with values far different and much higher than the kingdoms of the world. Some find it hard to understand it even today and are lost. He came not as any other highhanded ruler, 'dada' or a thug, but as a meek individual riding on a donkey.
As we go through this season of lent it will be expedient for us to reflect on the fact that Jesus did not come down with a god complex. But He laid it all aside and came down in humble obedience to His Father's will in human form, lived a sinless life, showed the path to eternal life and finally surrendered himself to be utterly abandoned into sinful human hands to be murdered cruelly on the cross - a symbol of curse. Surely he took up our infirmities and carried our sorrows, yet we considered him stricken by God, smitten by him, and afflicted (Isaiah 53:4). He did it cause we are precious to him and He loves us so much. As he emptied himself in total surrender even to the point of death on a cruel cross, the Father was well pleased to give him a name above all names that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow.
Philippians 2:6-11
New International Version (NIV)
6 Who, being in very nature God,
did not consider equality with God something to be used to his own advantage;
7 rather, he made himself nothing
by taking the very nature of a servant,
being made in human likeness.
8 And being found in appearance as a man,
he humbled himself
by becoming obedient to death—
even death on a cross!
did not consider equality with God something to be used to his own advantage;
7 rather, he made himself nothing
by taking the very nature of a servant,
being made in human likeness.
8 And being found in appearance as a man,
he humbled himself
by becoming obedient to death—
even death on a cross!
9 Therefore God exalted him to the highest place
and gave him the name that is above every name,
10 that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow,
in heaven and on earth and under the earth,
11 and every tongue acknowledge that Jesus Christ is Lord,
to the glory of God the Father.
and gave him the name that is above every name,
10 that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow,
in heaven and on earth and under the earth,
11 and every tongue acknowledge that Jesus Christ is Lord,
to the glory of God the Father.
Is a god complex lurking in us somewhere? The more we are stuck to our god complexes the more complex it becomes for God to work in us. What are we willing to let go during this lent? Jesus let go everything for us. He deserves the glory !!