Sunday, April 27, 2008

Beards and Inadequacies














(I hope the title isn't too Freudian...)

Today, I had an epiphany. We were speaking in Elder's Quorum about the "weak and simple" and the feelings of inadequacy we might have. (We were also making quilts and knitting bandages for leper colonies. I am told that in Relief Society they grilled steaks and watched Gladiator.)

In any case, I found some of the comments most revealing:

"On my mission, I never got called to any positions of leadership. I always wondered what was wrong with me. Were my numbers not good enough? Did I need to baptize more?"

"In one district I served in there were five District Presidents in a row who went inactive after being released. They all said that they felt like they had been fired––like they hadn't done well enough in their callings."

There were many more comments along those same lines. It made me wonder what the problem was. And then, suddenly, it came to me.

I looked around and realized we were all dressed like businessmen. Suits, ties, white shirts, short hair. It could have been a board meeting. I'm willing to bet at least half of those in attendance own copies of Seven Habits of Highly Pretentious People. With our perverse focus on corporate image in the church, our preoccupation with looking the part, is it any wonder that we tend to look at success or failure in corporate terms?

"Were my numbers not good enough?" Why didn't I get the promotion?

"Why was I fired as District President?"

An unfortunate part of missionary work is acculturalization: making wards and stakes all over the earth in the image of Happy Valley. (For instance, consider the account I just read about missionaries in Japan spending an evening with the ward to teach them how to celebrate Halloween.) This conflation of American culture and corporate ideals with the gospel of Jesus Christ is nothing short of pernicious. I suspect that it is somewhat driven by the fact that many (most?) Mission Presidents tend to be successful businessmen or lawyers. They are, after all, the ones with the cash and leisure time to go serve in such a position. They have administrative experience.

Is it any wonder, then, that branches of The One Holy and Apostolic Church sometimes look and behave like little more than franchise members of McMormon, Inc.? ("Have it OUR way!")

Well, I, for one, won't stand for it. I hope, friends, that you will join with me in this rejection of corporate paradigms, and resist the subjugation of Consecration to Capitalism.

Of course, one is forced to ask the question: Would we be facing this problem if we had just kept the beards? I understand the desire not to look like hippies, but I think the greater challenges we face today demand that we not look like CEOs.

Join with me, brethren. Save the Church, and exercise your god-given right to scruff!

3 comments:

dixonfamily said...

McMormons?! Fabulous! I understand what you are saying. That is pretty interesting. I think the Lord probably accepts the hairy and the clean shaven.

The Olsen's said...

Nick...you can go ahead and grow a beard...if you even can! HA! If this will help you to feel like you are really being more like Jesus, and being a better Christian...I say go for it! If however you are looking for an opportunity to thumb your nose at the unenlightened and the lemmings who follow mindlessly...don't cast your facial hair before swine...they will never understand and you will just look scruufy. But by all means buy a colored shirt and burn all the white ones...and while you are at it...skip the pants and buy a lava-lava. Maybe I'll grow some facial hair too...that will help change the corprate immaging of the Church...

apb said...

So... If I can't grow a beard either, am I out of the club? Great, so then the very organization created to keep things from being too organized has become the very thing it has sought to fight. I'm assuming by your lack of an immediate response that my theory is correct. Well two can play at this game! I'll start my own anti-anti establishment group--and WE won't discriminate based on beard length. Long live peach fuzz!!!