{"id":2573,"date":"2005-09-07T18:22:53","date_gmt":"2005-09-07T22:22:53","guid":{"rendered":"\/?p=2573"},"modified":"2005-09-08T07:22:02","modified_gmt":"2005-09-08T11:22:02","slug":"lucky","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/timesandseasons.org\/index.php\/2005\/09\/lucky\/","title":{"rendered":"Luck"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>There&#8217;s a new family which just moved into our ward; the father is also a new professor at WIU, like myself, and he&#8217;s occupying a temporary slot here, trying to figure out what will come next, also like myself. So we have a fair amount in common. We had them over for dinner on Monday, and I discovered something else we have in common: Katrina. Or rather, how close we came to being in its path.<!--more--> <\/p>\n<p>I interviewed last spring at the University of Southern Mississippi, with campuses in Hattiesburg and Gulfport, and nearly got the job. He interviewed last spring at the University of Southern Alabama, with a campus in Mobile, and nearly got the job. They were tenure-track jobs, and we wanted them badly; we worked hard for them, prayed and fasted about them, felt good about our chances of getting them. Then we didn&#8217;t get them. Both universities hired someone else, who got to move down south and begin a new career and be part of a new community and make a new start, and who were then presumably slammed by Katrina, and may have lost everything, perhaps even their lives. My new friend and I, meanwhile, scrambled and picked up these temporary jobs, and moved to a small town in western Illinois.<\/p>\n<p>Was it luck?<\/p>\n<p>The ancient Greeks and Romans had no problem with the notion of luck. She was Nike, a tiny winged goddess, frequent associate of Athena, speeding about the universe, a harbringer of victory and luck. Sometimes she was there, sometimes she wasn&#8217;t. You worshipped her, offered sacrifices and prayers and poems, called upon her name. Even if you didn&#8217;t believe in her literally (and in all likelihood few of our civilization&#8217;s ancestors probably did), you still knew that &#8220;the gods&#8221; (generically, indistinctively) may or may not be with you in any endeavor or choice. So you pushed your luck, or hoarded it, trying to lure or implore the goddess&#8217;s eye your way, metaphorically speaking of course. The metaphor continued on for centuries, and continues today. &#8220;Fortune is a woman,&#8221; stated Machiavelli in <em>The Prince<\/em>, calling upon those he advised to live boldly, take large (if measured) risks, assess their surroundings unsentimentally and eschew weakeness&#8211;to look back, doubt, cavil or quail before the arbitrariness of life was to prove oneself effeminate; fortune, who responds to rough, confident treatment, would not bless anyone with her affections who did not show himself to be made of stern stuff. Sky Masterson of <em>Guys and Dolls<\/em> fame implored luck to &#8220;be a lady,&#8221; a &#8220;nice dame,&#8221; to stick with him&#8211;the high roller, the confident craps-shooter, the Alpha male of the New York gambling world, who had been such a fine escort to her over the years. And she does: Sky wins the biggest bet of his life, shows where luck really resides, and all&#8211;as it turns out&#8211;to the ultimate benefit of the Salvation Army. (Who says God doesn&#8217;t play dice?)<\/p>\n<p>Monotheism, and particularly Christianity, seem to put a damper on all this luck talk. There are no lucky or unlucky people! Yes, some are blessed and some are cursed&#8211;perhaps for reasons of righteousness or wickedness, perhaps for God&#8217;s own inscrutable reasons, but always, always for a purpose. There is no arbitrariness here, no random force in the universe that sometimes does, and sometimes doesn&#8217;t, answer our desires and reward our longings. If there is one God, then He must be an accountable  God, and the universe He created&#8211;with its angels and devils and hurricanes and whatever else&#8211;must therefore be something that we can make an account of, without appeal to some sort of winged randomness. We can trust God, <a href=\"http:\/\/scriptures.lds.org\/query?words=job+13%3A15\">as Job insisted<\/a>, and if we can&#8217;t take Job&#8217;s word for it, whose can we?.<\/p>\n<p>And yet, just what <em>is<\/em> Job&#8217;s word? Those who have actually read and struggled with the Book of Job know that its story is far more than that of a faithful man enduring misfortune; it is the story of a faithful man firmly, relentelessly, unapologetically demanding that God account for the misfortune that we are given to understand God directly allowed to come upon him. God finally answers, telling Job, in essence, to <a href=\"http:\/\/scriptures.lds.org\/query?words=job+38%3A2\">shut up<\/a>. Job accepts the wisdom of that answer, and <a href=\"http:\/\/scriptures.lds.org\/query?words=job+42%3A1-6\">repents<\/a> of his presumption. So that&#8217;s one option&#8211;though I must admit that in some ways, well, if that&#8217;s Yahweh, I think I sometimes might prefer Nike.<\/p>\n<p>Our own doctrine tends to suggest (though not without a fair amount of internal tension) a partial way out of this monotheistic dilemma&#8211;God <em>isn&#8217;t<\/em> strictly accountable for everything in this world. Not because He lacks in power, but because His love for us requires that He accept certain immutable facts about the nature of identity and morality. A perfectly accountable and responsive God would be, according to this line of reasoning, a God who undermines temporal human freedom, and without such mortal freedom, there can be no growth, and thus no fulfillment of our godlike potential. Thus there must needs be a certain amount of unpredictability in who is hit by hurricanes, and when, and how, because if it there were not, then the trials and tests which such unknowability provides would be lost, and God&#8217;s ability to show us enough love as to want us to be like Him would be lost. He would instead be treating us like playthings, treasured pets, not full persons, and that&#8217;s not Godlike love at all. And so we conclude that, while we agree as good monotheists that there is a supreme God who has perfectly designed the universe, and that there is no &#8220;real&#8221; randomness in the sense of tragedies and fortunes emerging from the actions of a mysterious second or third party, the actual structure of the world prevents any kind of one-to-one correspondence between our persons and our &#8220;luck,&#8221; or lack thereof. We may be blessed for our faithfulness; then again, we may be tested as well. And we may be punished for our sins, and we may not. And sometimes we just endure for purposes unknown. (Paraphrasing Elder Neal A. Maxwell, who was paraphrasing George MacDonald: we are not always the helpful hammer which is shaping and pounding the iron ore into something beautiful, nor always the iron receiving the rough but necessary treatment. Sometimes we are merely the anvil.) <\/p>\n<p>Okay, so perhaps there must needs be unpredictability, even a certain kind of mortal unaccountability, in the matter of who moves into, and who moves away from, the paths of hurricanes. But that&#8217;s not the only question. There is also the question, <em>must there needs be hurricanes?<\/em> If we really do imagine that God has created a world within which there are certain events that are, insofar as His plans for the world make necessary, both unknowable and unavoidable, events which connect to purposes that are larger than any account in particular but are part of the overall design of the world itself, then aren&#8217;t we suggesting that He, in the name of this grand and heartfelt love, has actually given up some of His own compassion? That He has loosened upon the world a randomness impervious to all forms of agency? In which case, is God, in some small yet profound sense, also a fatalist, shaking His head at the world but unwilling (because unable) to respond to it when it (and His children who live upon it) cry out to Him? I imagine an infinitely wise and loving and powerful version of Detective &#8220;Dirty&#8221; Harry Callahan, pointing His finger (you know, the one bringing life to Adam in the Sistine Chapel painting) at us like a gun, intoning with voice fraught with divine concern and sorrow, &#8220;I&#8217;m going to put hurricanes down there. Now, some of them may hit you, while some of them may not. You might move to Gulfport, and lose everything; you might move to Macomb, IL, and be secure. The question you have to ask yourself is: do you feel lucky? Well, do you, my children?&#8221; (Had to change the line: &#8220;punk&#8221; just seems a little too vernacular for God to use.)<\/p>\n<p>We recoil at such a notion. God, a fatalist, staring down the barrell of the world, waiting to see which way we&#8217;ll run (sadly already knowing, but waiting nonetheless)? Of course not. God is not subject to fate; rather, He is the master of our fates, the captain of our souls. We pray to Him, and are answered with miracles and revelations and comfort and counsel. He is, in short, compassionate: He hears and answers prayers. God can, and has, moved hurricanes (or at least <a href=\"http:\/\/scriptures.lds.org\/query?words=ether+12%3A30\">mountains<\/a>); surely He can move a family in a hurricane&#8217;s path. I prayed for the job in Mississippi, but I also prayed that whatever happened be what is right for our family. We didn&#8217;t get the job, and we ended up moving far away from Katrina. Well, that&#8217;s certainly an answer, and one I am grateful for: I am very, very glad right now that I didn&#8217;t get the job in Mississippi. God took compassion on me and my family, and protected us. Of course, someone else got the job, and so perhaps God wasn&#8217;t quite as compassionate towards her or him. Does that kind of ruin the whole thing? Are we prepared to accept a <em>selectively<\/em> compassionate God? Some would say, of course, we must; a compassion which is not selective, which does not grace the wise virgins and <a href=\"http:\/\/scriptures.lds.org\/query?words=Matthew+25%3A+1-13\">shut out<\/a> the foolish ones, isn&#8217;t compassion at all, but some nonsensical, undifferentiated universal &#8220;love&#8221; that makes no demands at all. (Though my daughter <a href=\"http:\/\/timesandseasons.org\/index.php?p=779\">thinks otherwise<\/a>.) I can see the sense in that. But it also seems to me that such an understanding turns on my ability to see myself as a wise virgin, and the person hired by USM, or the person who drowned in their basement in New Orleans, or each of the hundreds of thousands killed in last Christmas&#8217;s tsunami, as a foolish virgin. And that is an understanding I doubt I will ever have.<\/p>\n<p>So what? As <a href=\"http:\/\/timesandseasons.org\/index.php?p=2560\">Nate suggests<\/a>, &#8220;God often has projects for us other than understanding&#8221;; as the <a href=\"http:\/\/scriptures.lds.org\/query?words=philippians+4%3A7\">scriptures themselves promise<\/a>, God&#8217;s grace is in fact a &#8220;peace . . . which passeth <em>all<\/em> understanding.&#8221; I&#8217;m not going to understand it: just respond to the suffering, and leave it at that. A good answer, though not one which puts the Mormon finitist position in any significant way ahead of the traditional monotheistic one. Should that bother me? Should it bother me that my new friend and I, like every other Christian ever, are really not any different than Job&#8211;equally placed in the midst of a (to us) unaccountable turn of events, insisting that there is meaning to be found therein, exercising faith in its existence, doubting that the object of our faith is in fact a significant one, knowing full well that we probably (even structurally!) will be prevented from ever knowing either way? I suppose not. But I will say that if Job <em>is<\/em> the essential and universal human story (and I think it is: Job, as a scriptural text, stands in my opinion with the Gospel of John, the Book of Romans, and the Book of Jacob in its ultimate import), then I think there is little harm in dropping our theological pretentions once in a while, and just contenting ourselves with a little bit of luck.<\/p>\n<p>I have a wife, three children, a job, food on the table, books on the shelf, and no water in my basement. I don&#8217;t live in Gulfport. I am a lucky man. I don&#8217;t, because I can&#8217;t, presume for that to mean anything whatsoever about what God thinks of me or what He has planned for me. It&#8217;s just an account&#8211;an account limited in explanatory power, superficial in its meaning, possibly apostate in its associations. But it is a functional account; it tells me who is fortunate, and who is not, and that the fortunate ought not act as though they have any more right to their fortune than they would if, well, than if it had been bestowed upon them by some flighty, winged fairy. Despair and death reign in New Orleans and along the Gulf Coast. Melissa and I send off a check&#8211;because we can, because we can afford to. Lucky us.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>There&#8217;s a new family which just moved into our ward; the father is also a new professor at WIU, like myself, and he&#8217;s occupying a temporary slot here, trying to figure out what will come next, also like myself. So we have a fair amount in common. We had them over for dinner on Monday, and I discovered something else we have in common: Katrina. Or rather, how close we came to being in its path.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":25,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-2573","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-corn"],"jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"jetpack_featured_media_url":"","_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/timesandseasons.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2573","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/timesandseasons.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/timesandseasons.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/timesandseasons.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/25"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/timesandseasons.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=2573"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/timesandseasons.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2573\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/timesandseasons.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=2573"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/timesandseasons.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=2573"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/timesandseasons.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=2573"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}