Sunday, December 2, 2007

Yawning And The Tragic Epidemic

I was on my way to work the other day. 7:30 can be kind of early. At a stoplight I glanced across the intersection and a woman in a dark grey Suburban pitched back a huge yawn. The light changed and even before I moved my foot onto the gas my jaw dropped and I let out a yawn.
That got me thinking...

Yawning is an interesting thing. Doctors have a hard time explaining the actual purpose of a yawn to the human body, so they're left to their speculations...
Some think that we do it because the body is in need of more oxygen in the brain and lungs.
Others think it's because we get bored and our minds and not quite stimulated enough.
And the most common speculation is because we're just plain tired.
There really is a whole lot of other theories out there, but we do know two things about yawning for sure.
1. That it' purely involuntary. Even babies still in their mothers womb have been known to yawn
And 2. Yawning is extremely contagious. In fact, if you're standing in a large group of people and one person lets out a yawn over half of that group will yawn in the next five minutes and the rest of you will think about it.

All those facts make yawning a very interesting subject to me. It makes me see the unique similarities between the epidemic of the yawn and the tragic epidemic of sin.

Now here's a theory. It's pretty much all my own and it could be thought of as ridiculous but it's fun and I thought I'd share it anyway, besides it kind helps make a point, so just go with me on this. I believe yawning has been around since Adam and Eve. As it happened, one day (after "the fall" of course) one of them let out a yawn and ever since we've been yawning because of the contagious nature of it.
Think about it...
Go back to that morning with me. in the car, on my way to work. That woman probably yawned in response to seeing, remembering, or even subconsciously recollecting the image of someone else yawning not too long ago. (those yawns are what I like to call "sleeper yawns") I then saw the yawn and through mental contagion I was infected and yawned. Now it is quite possible and in fact very likely that someone else on the road that morning passed my car, looked through the window, and saw my yawn. and what happened? I passed the epidemic along. Think of that. That very yawn, that morning, was a result of Adam and Eve yawning so very long ago. An Epidemic. The very same yawn for thousands and thousands of years has reached billions and billions of people. Babies in their mothers womb hearing them yawn. contagious. seeing the action of someone yawn across the room. Contagious. Across traffic. Contagious. On TV. Contagious. And there is nothing we can do to stop it or even protect ourselves from yawning again, because the very action is ingrained into our being and it sneaks up on us. We don't know when the person next to us might yawn and infect us. In fact, when they do yawn we see that and as much as we might not want to yawn our subconscious says "oooh, we need that too!"

And all of this even in it's humor and farce is exactly like the tragic epidemic of sin.

Sin began with Adam and Eve and has been in our bloodline ever since. We are in fact born into sin and though we are covered by grace up until the age of accountability our lives both in young and old are laced with sin. And interestingly enough sin seems to run a strikingly similar course to yawning.
Sin is contagious. without the Spirit and the Word to guide us we are brought quickly to the threshold of sin. Can you remember the first sin you aknowledgably committed? I'm guessing ninety percent of us committed that act with someone else or on the account of someone else prompting us to do it.
"stealing is fun, it's easy, I get away with it all the time!"
"You don't have to tell your parents where you've been or what you're doing, just make up a lie"

And it goes on.
Sin, if left to it's own vices is pretty much an involuntary action. Now you my be offended to hear that but give me a chance to explain. Does it take more will and determination to sin or to do what is right? is it easier to lie or to tell the truth? to be mad and vengeful, or forgiving and compassionate? We are a sinful people and it's in our very nature to sin. It's interesting to note that like yawning, if one person in a group of people sins, more than help will follow suit and the rest will have at least thought about it. take the teenagers of this generation for example. It is so much easier to follow the crown than to rise up and go against it.
We are fallen and broken, sinful and yawning. We, like yawning, sin when we're bored. allowing our minds to wander into places it was never meant to go. Depression, negative thoughts, envy, lust, hatred...

But there is hope. And truly, sometimes, hope is all we really have. In Christ Jesus there is a forgiveness of sins and a release from this generational curse. We will always be prone and lean towards sin as long as we occupy these shells, but it is in Christ who gives us strength, and opportunity for a way out. A second chance, a better shot.
To seek for the heart and mind of Christ. To see our life as he would see it, looking at the widows, orphans, the lost, broken, poor, and needy through His eyes. With compassion instead of disdain. To realize we are blessed beyond compare, that the freedom of God is not only a freedom from sin, but a freedom to worship, a freedom to give and a freedom to receive love and blessings, correction and brokenness, joy and tears. Leaning into Christ is leaning away from sin. It doesn't mean sin disappears or is no longer an issue, it just means that where sin abounds, grace abounds all that much more. Grace too is a choice, a choice that the Father lavishes on us His broken sons and daughters. In hope that by His example we might choose to lavish that grace to everyone around us. not just our friends and family, but moreover to our enemies and those who mean ill will towards us. the opportunity for grace is always there. And grace, if we choose it, can be contagious too.

And as for the yawning, well, I guess we'll just have to live with it.

Aaron

1 comment:

James said...

Aaron;
Great read. I left a long comment, but it got erased. When I have more time I'll retype it and post it.
Thanks for the wonderful thoughts.
I'll blog later.
JIM