BETRAYED BY THOSE WHO WE THOUGHT 'GOT IT' - NARCISSISM AMONG THE "ENLIGHTENED"
Years ago during the Vietnam protests, researchers studied the level of consciousness and self-awareness of those engaged in protests. The assumption was that the protestors engaged this work out of a larger consciousness, a true love for justice, a global worldview, a sense of compassion. What they found was that the large majority were still highly egocentric, "pre-conventional" as some call it, and invested in the cause from a place of self-interest. In other words, their efforts were narcissistic.Ken Wilber's investigation into this phenomenon in Boomeritis and later in A Theory of Everything demonstrates how central egocentricity is in narcissistic people and movements, even those that appear more just, compassionate, even "right"! Wilber's turn-of-the-millennium critique (which equally ticks off progressives and fundamentalists) targets the shadow side of their supposed enlightenment, and it was remarkably prophetic. As he argues today, the election of 2016 was, in part, an evolutionary corrective to the egocentricity of the enlightened. Hillary's "deplorable" comment is the best example of it. He points to an inclusionary movement which contradicted itself in its often harsh, polarized practices. While we thought we were progressing toward justice and inclusion, in truth we hadn't yet worked out our collective developmental shit (my translation). We have more growing up to do, individually and collectively.While Wilber's cultural reflections are helpful for our larger political conversation, I receive his insights as valuable for the church. I sometimes hear - "He preached so beautifully. His vision of the Gospel was so rich. I felt God's love through his presence. How could he betray me?" Or I may hear, "He's such a courageous warrior for justice. His story is so compelling. And yet he is so manipulative. Why?" What is important here is that Wilber frames this conversation developmentally. Again, if we haven't worked out our developmental growth (our shit, as I translated it earlier), we're prone to engage in higher level, important conversations from a lower level of consciousness and self-awareness. And that's when the damage is done.Consider a church planter whose vision, personality and story were compelling. I knew him as someone who seemed moderately self-aware. And yet, a year into his plant, his egocentricity began to show in technicolor. As the Seventh Day Adventist church they rented swelled to overflowing in time, so did his ego. You wouldn't see it on Sunday mornings or during a visit over coffee. But it came out in cruel emotional abuse of his wife, condescension toward his mostly-volunteer staff, and inordinate spending of their limited budget. Confronted with these things, a healthy pastor would lean toward curiosity and humility. But he reacted in rage. For so many in the congregation who would be told the church plant was being shut down by the governing body above it, there was confusion. Some said that they'd never heard the love of Jesus preached more clearly, more powerfully.Consider the young social justice warrior who appeared to be the only one speaking for a marginalized group. Seemingly brave in social media spaces and in his local contexts, he argued in ways that made you think, "If I'm not with him, I must be a terrible human being." His pleas for justice appealed to God's compassion and mercy, and he knew his Bible well. And yet, those closest to him, even trusted allies, began to wonder about his integrity. He'd lie, engage in manipulative self-pity, and make up stories of pain to raise money for the cause. When he was found out, he'd go 'scorched earth' on his previous community, leave town, and start again. Those he left behind, especially the marginalized group he befriended, wondered how he could so quickly abandon them.Sometimes people mistake narcissism as an inordinate focus on the self. In fact, narcissism is seen in people who lack any self-awareness. The (false) self they inflict on the world is not a self they know or are aware of. In our early, pre-conventional developmental states, we simply act, without awareness, and often from a guttural urge or when blended with some tribal consciousness. In other words, we speak and act unaware. As the myth of Narcissus shows us, Narcissus was not connected with his (true) self, but an image beyond himself, ever-illusive, uncontrollable, and ultimately enslaving.In 25 years of ministry (with two stints as a "Pastor of Spiritual Formation" in Reformed contexts), what I see so often in pastors is a profound lack of healthy self-awareness, what many throughout the centuries have called "knowledge of self." Calvin's doctrine of double-knowledge may not have been sophisticated psychologically, but it bears the honest self-reflection of his theological mentor, St. Augustine, whose Confessions represent to us an early example of pastoral wisdom. As my counseling professor in seminary might say, "Learn to tell your story well...and honestly." Honest self-examination allowed 19th century London preacher Charles Spurgeon to confess to his congregants that he couldn't preach as often as he'd like because of his depression. Honest self-examination led pastor Richard Baxter (author of The Reformed Pastor) to write a tome called The Mischiefs of Self-Ignorance and the Benefits of Self-Acquaintance. Or the 17th c. Presbyterian clergyman John Flavel to write in Keeping the Heart, "There are some men and women who have lived forty or fifty years in the world and have had scarcely one hour’s discourse with their hearts all the while.”Enlightenment, as it turns out, isn't about getting it. Perhaps, in the end it's about not getting it. I see many pastors who can turn a phrase, cast a vision, or please a crowd. I'm looking for women and men who are humble, who follow in the way of a suffering servant. Today, we need disciples of Jesus, women and men who go on a journey of self-knowledge which, paradoxically, is a journey of self-denial, because who would not want to cast off their egocentric self to become truly human?A quick story to end this piece...When I was in Orlando, a student who most didn't think had promise made his way from Orlando to Montana (I'm changing some details here, of course), to take a small, frustrating congregation. It was the only job he could get. He packed his family of five into their beat-up Ford Windstar and headed Northwest, hopeful to find some extra income to supplement the pittance he was offered. By day, he pastored. By night, he packaged eggs in a factory. He buried, he married, he baptized. And five years later, when several legends of the seminary were dealing with charges of adultery or pornography or theft, he was still pastoring. And ten years later, when his peers had left ministry to sell insurance, when the star of his class had to resign in disgrace, he was still preaching, and teaching, and baptizing, and packaging eggs.He's still there. Loving and leading, baptizing and burying, laughing and crying with his beautiful and broken people.Eugene Peterson calls this a long obedience in the same direction. He stumbled in Greek class. He couldn't keep up when we'd engage fast-paced, heated theological debates. And, he's not at all concerned about social media, which kind of ticks me off...because to make my point, I'd like to link you to his church. But, that would be self-serving, of course - a monument to egocentricity, the ministerial idol of our age, the developmental roadblock which both confuses and terrorizes. I swim in these dangerous waters too. Lord, have mercy.Noverim me. Noverim te. Those are the words of Augustine.Let me know myself. Let me know you.Let it be.