Tuesday, February 9, 2016

Nothing New

       It’s easy to take a piece of ancient literature and find things that separate ourselves from earlier civilizations. However, if we look closer at that same piece of literature and take a good hard look at ourselves, we can find a lot of similarities as well. What do you think of when you read these quotes: “the Devil has led this nation too far astray for many years, and there has been little loyalty among men,” “the laws of the people have deteriorated all too much,” “Rather it seems this nation has become thoroughly corrupted through manifold sins and  many misdeeds: through acts of murder and evil, through avarice and greed, through theft and thievery, through slavery and pagan abuses, through treachery and trickery, through the breach of law and order”(Wulfstan)? If you thought of complaints that you have heard about our modern times and country, then you thought of the same things as I did while reading much of Wulfstan’s Sermo Lupi ad Anglos homily.
           
       Wulfstan’s writing in Sermo Lupi ad Anglos was rather dark and depressing. In the very opening line of his homily he states that the world, “draws near its end” and goes on to call for the people to change their ways in order to prevent that from happening. When I look at the news and media in today’s world, or even in conversations I have or overhear, I often pick up a lot of similarities in both tone and language. Who hasn’t heard someone say that, “people have no respect for each other these days” or that our country doesn’t stand for and represent what it once did in its early days? We all know that our country has a dark past in slavery, are well aware of the presence of Capitalistic greed in our country, and know that murder and thievery are issues that are still very much alive. When we tune our ears into the global conversation that is being held on the subject global warming it’s inevitable that we hear people’s fears that the end of the world is near, or that the end of life as we know it is inevitable unless we change our ways, similar to Wulfstan’s tone in his homily.
          
       How are we supposed to feel once we realize that we haven’t overcame issues that were present over 1,000 years ago when Wulfstan wrote this homily? There are many things we can take away from this. Maybe Wulfstan was right all along about the end of the world and it’s all going to be over very soon, he just didn’t have the timing right and its now all boiling down to this. We can look at this text, see the similarities between us and them and think, “the human race is just inherently flawed and we will never fully eradicate the problems we have faced for centuries now”. Or we can look at Wulfstan’s concern and realize that every civilization from the beginning of time has had its fair share of very real problems and that the future of humanity has always been on the brink of a very drastic change. I personally find comfort in the fact that people have always had concerns that the end of the world is near, but the Earth has continued to rotate and the human race has continued to grow and thrive despite these fears. I'm not saying that we don't have issues that we as the human race have to work out, because it’s very obvious that we do. I just think we have to remember that the tides of change are very slow and that many of these problems have a much deeper rooted history than we often remember, therefore we shouldn’t beat ourselves down with too much negativity when we’re looking for the solutions to various problems we face today. 



I chose this picture because it represents the good and evil that exists in our world. 
            

5 comments:

  1. I am glad that even though you are faced with the real truths that humanity is flawed, you choose to see the good. I think we have a choice in life, we can choose to only see the bad or we can choose to only see the good. I choose to seek out the good in the midst of all the bad. In regard to change, if we are to see a better future and a better world then we must begin to change ourselves individually. Perhaps, one day when we change our hearts for the better we will outstretch our hands to help rather than harm our fellow man.

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    1. I absolutely agree with your statements Kinzi. There is no better way to change the world than to change ourselves individually. We are all capable of good and evil and it is up to us to decide what we are going to bring into the world. The best way to lead is to be an example, and while we may never completely eradicate evil from our world, we can certainly get close by truly teaching ourselves to show compassion to each and every person we encounter in our lives.

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  2. Bobby, I really like this post because it was similar to mine! I agree with you that we have a lot of the same problems that they had during the literature we have read so far! It's so interesting to me that people say with "history repeats itself" but in all reality it truly does! A lot of the example given in Wulfstan's piece can be applied to today and still be true and valid! Crazy!

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    1. Danielle, isn't it crazy that they had some of the problems we are having today? We get so caught up in our bubble that we often forget that everyone who came before us made us who we are today, so it really shouldn't be a surprise when we realize that some of humanities biggest problems are thousands of years old. I just hope that in our lifetime we we solve more problems than we create.

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