Sermon preached at the United Benefice of Holland Park churches, Sunday 9 July 2017, by Dr Eve Poole
Sermon preached at the United Benefice of Holland Park churches, Sunday 9 July
2017, by Dr Eve Poole
May the words of my mouth, and the
meditation of all our hearts, be now and always acceptable in thy sight, O Lord
our strength and our redeemer.
“I do not understand my own actions. For I do not do what I
want, but I do the very thing I hate.”
I wonder how many of you have tried to give something up. For
Lent, perhaps, or to lose weight? Or maybe you‘ve tried to give up smoking? So
the words of St Paul will be familiar to you. That feeling when you
accidentally cram yet another biscuit into your mouth while absent-mindedly
chatting to a friend, then you realise you weren’t supposed to be eating it?
This sense of dislocation, of being divided against yourself,
is what St Paul means. You may also have felt like this when you’ve lost
control of your body – when it develops a mind of its own when you’re pregnant,
or when your legs or your memory refuse to play ball as you get older.
Thanks to neuroscience, we have fancier words than sin and the
law to describe it these days. Try this, St Paul: in the orbitofrontal cortex,
a decision-making area of the brain, the brain's circuits for habitual and
goal-directed action compete for control. Usually, habit wins: neurochemicals
called endocannabinoids act as a sort of brake on the goal-directed circuit to
allow for habit to take over. Makes sense? This jargon is describing the rather
mechanical process your brain indulges in to try to conserve energy. To do so,
it uses tried-and-tested short-cuts, the neural pathways called heuristics, to
keep you operating as efficiently as possible.
That’s why habits are so terribly hard to break. And today I
want to talk to you about your habits, and specifically about habits to do with
money. I want to offer you some ideas about how you might both audit and
improve your money habits. Why? Because where your treasure is, there your
heart will be also.
Charles Duhigg wrote a useful book about habits that breaks
them down into three steps: Cue, Routine, Reward. You enter the kitchen, make a
cup of tea, then sit down to savour that first sip. You are quite literally on
auto-pilot when you do this most of the time. So if you want to give up taking
sugar in your tea, you have to disrupt one of these steps, to shock your brain
out of autopilot so that you can take back the controls. So perhaps you plug
your kettle into the wrong socket, or you hide the sugar bowl in a cupboard, or
you move all the mugs. Any such move buys you time to make an active choice
rather than succumb to your habit.
But why is this doubly hard when it comes to money? The
wonderful theologian Richard Beck suspects it is because consumerism is
designed to feast on your neuroticism. Do you remember the Dr Seuss book about
the Sneetches? There are Star-Belly Sneetches and Plain-Belly Sneetches. One
day, an entrepreneur comes to town with a machine. The plain-bellies give him
cash, and he puts a star on their bellies. Then he charges the outraged
star-bellies to have their stars removed; then the newly starred to have theirs
removed, then the original stars to be replaced, and so forth and so on, until
he leaves them in disarray, a very rich man.
They did a similar study on vervet monkeys. The famous
experiments carried out by the UCLA scientists McGuire and Raleigh found that
high-ranking male vervets had nearly twice as much serotonin in their blood as
those ranking lower in the social hierarchy. If an alpha male was displaced by
a challenger, his seratonin levels would plummet, until he was able to
re-assert his status in the troop. And this is what happens when you buy the
latest ‘thing.’ When your social group signal their approval, you get a burst
of serotonin, and this becomes addictive because if you don’t keep ‘on top’ you
will quite literally feel depressed. No wonder teenage anxiety is sky-rocketing
in an age of 24x7 social media.
This yearning is what drives consumerism, with seductive
advertising designed to suggest that as long as you keep on buying the latest
thing, you’ll always be socially on top. Many theologians have written about
these ‘technologies of desire’ that fuel consumerism. They want us to stop
desiring things, because it’s naughty. I think that’s a rather tall order, and,
taking a motif from the martial arts, I prefer the idea that an opponent is
best defeated if you use their own force against them. So I was delighted when
I discovered, through Richard Harries, the work of the 17th Century theologian
Thomas Traherne. He thinks desire might actually be the proper starting point
for Christians. Traherne argues that, because God is so prone to give, ‘it is
of the nobility of man’s soul that he is insatiable… the noble inclination
whereby man thirsteth after riches and dominion, is his highest virtue, when
rightly guided’. So is our insatiability just a noble spiritual good gone
wrong?
Rowan Williams has this to say about our restless search for
completion through ‘things’: he wants us to grow up. He reckons that it’s
childish to imagine that we’re on the verge of completion, and that the latest
gadget, accessory or experience will fill that last neat hole and make us –
finally – happy. Growing up requires us to stop desiring satisfaction, which is
the end of desire, and to come to terms with the incurable character of our
desire. Nothing on earth should satisfy us. We are designed to be restless
until we find our rest in God, so we should embrace this yearning in our
character, and find peace in our yearning not for stuff but for God.
So if we are hard-wired to yearn, and need to school
ourselves away from things and towards grace, are there some easy ways we can
start this journey? I think we can smuggle grace in, along with things, until
it takes a firer hold in our lives. And we can do that by shining a spotlight
on our money habits.
Money is how we vote daily for the kind of economy we want,
and I bet you’re already pretty fabulous at spending for the Kingdom. You
probably already buy fair-trade and ethically sourced goods. You probably make
good use of local shops, markets and charity shops, and reuse and recycle
wherever you can. But here’s my question. If I asked you during the Peace
instead of shaking hands to exchange bank statements, would you feel proud
about what you were handing over? If not, what’s on there that shames you?
Here’s mine. I’ve used a highlighter pen. Some of it is good;
but some of it needs improvement. Can you work on yours every month, gradually
turning the reds to ambers and the ambers to greens? And maybe you could
appoint a bank-statement buddy to hold you to account about it.
It’ll be a right pain. You’ll feel inconvenienced and
overcharged. But we’ve learned about the ‘fair-trade premium’ and we gladly pay
extra for that. So how about a grace premium, so you can delight in being
gracefully overcharged and gracefully inconvenienced? Could each sacrifice
become an offering and a prayer for a more Kingdom-shaped marketplace? Let’s
all start with our very next transaction. Will it be a vote for the Kingdom, or
will you subside back into those very comfortable ways that St Paul warns us
about? It may seem daunting, setting off on this journey with God. But our
Gospel today reassures us: Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am
gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke
is easy and my burden is light. Amen