This past week I have been working on setting up my home office. My undergrad degree was in Applied Computer Science and a minor in Physics so I still take to the tech world a little bit. So I was installing a wireless network, my work laptop and the family computer. As Balki Bartokomous used to say, it was easy as cake and a piece of pie. Successfully installing some technology is very rewarding and yet there is a dark side of this same force as well. Introduce the new printer...
A gracious and generous friend from Fellowship Nashville bought Jacob's Well a sweet color laser printer which also scans, faxes and gives back massages. Well, maybe I am embellishing a bit...but it is a sweet printer. I unpacked the box, installed a hardware duplexer (both sides of the paper please!) and we were off and running. I plugged in my USB cable to my laptop and viola! Printing in less than 5 minutes...pride cometh before a fall. The printer is also networkable and I wanted to be able to print from our family computer...and from my wireless network anywhere in the house. Part II of my printer installation experience took 5 hours.
So I followed instructions installing a wireless network card into the printer - pretty simple. Then ran the install stuff and unplugged...nothing. Then I spent a good few hours reading a fat manual and trying different methods of installation. Finally, I did the unthinkable - I called Dell Tech Support. For about an hour I did exactly what the guy said, which was stuff I already had tried - which did nothing but make me feel less stupid. Then we gave the printer a permanent IP address (something I think the Dell install manual should tell you to do, but I digress) and thought we had made it. Nope. Anyway, the install routine was not giving it a TCP/IP port in Windows - we went in and added a port and finally...printing again. The Dell guy was cool and very helpful - but it took time and a bit of perseverance.
In going through this joyous process I realized how my life centers around getting stuff to "work right." I want my marriage to work right, my kids to work right, my body to work right, my work to work right and of course, my newfangled techno-gadgets to work right. Yet I keep running into this problem - things can and do go "wrong." So for me, my entangled battle with a printer is an echo of the running battle that all people face living outside of Eden.
- We want the world to be rational and moral...and it is, well, sometimes
- We want things to go well...and they don't, and do...sometimes
- We want to control things...and we can...sometimes, but then realize it is an illusion...well, sometimes
- We want life to be easier, but it is hard
- We want joy to flow from all our possessions and trappings - and it doesn't
- We want life to be full and sometimes it is boring and mundane
- We think sex, food and new experiences will fix it all - and we are perplexed when they don't
So it seems to me that there are two ways you can look at this world, both based on the reality of our mingled existence...that there is a real experience of joy, goodness, truth, love and beauty and an equal amount of despondency, evil, deception, guile and ugliness. When we run into this reality all the time. It is why we get drunk.
So my question is this: What more defines your world? Brokenness or Beauty, Harmony or Havoc?
- You can see the world as a random place of chaos where death and survival are the only laws of the jungle. In this view love is accidental (not essential) and pain would seem essential.
- You can see this as a world of purpose and order where truth, purpose and goodness govern the universe. In this view chaos/evil are accidental (not essential, even alien) and love/goodness is essential.
It is my contention that we all long for goodness and love and think the world ought to be a more hospitable place. In other words, we think existence is a good thing but there is stuff going awfully wrong - like my printer. We hope, love, dream, desire and ache for another place. As CS Lewis once rightly wrote in his classic Mere Christianity: "If I find in myself a desire which no experience in this world can satisfy, the most probable explanation is that I was made for another world."
So my printer now prints...and is filled with awesomeness...but it doesn't yet scan on the network...and the control panel seems to have an admin password that I neither asked for or assigned. So it seems like technology bliss and banality both remain ahead. Likewise, my life will likely continue to travel roads that are mingled as well. I know I will need to choose to follow God tomorrow and love my neighbor as myself. I know that I must resist the dark paths that emerge from my own soul and choose to stay close to Jesus. I need to find his grace in my failures and new hope tomorrow. I need him to teach me that God is good and governing the chaos and some day the alien darkness will lift from his world. To think otherwise is to give way to a view of life that is less human...and certainly not from God.
Aug 25, 2008








Comments
LOL: buy a mac!
:-)
bet you didnt' see that ONE coming!
no just kidding. hope things are going well in Jersey!
Posted by: BV | August 25, 2008 09:30 PM
Then ran the install stuff and unplugged...nothing. Then I spent a good few hours reading a fat manual and trying different methods of installation. Finally, I did the unthinkable - I called Dell Tech Support. For about an hour I did exactly what the guy said, which was stuff I already had tried - which did nothing but make me feel less stupid.
Posted by: Ahmad | August 26, 2008 06:30 AM
Macs had nothing to do with this one Ben ole buddy! Believe me this was a wireless networking/printer hardware IP issue/and TCP/IP port config issue. Basically Dell's install routine was not doing the job it was made to do...for the printer.
For those Mac people out there, the world does not call 802.11b/g/n networks "my airport" - they call it WiFi or "wireless"
Ben, when do you complete your studies? You ought to move up to Jersey and get a job up here. Tons of industry (pharma/biotech) and academia.
That would be cool - you can bring your Mac too!
Posted by: Reid | August 26, 2008 08:11 AM
hey Reid:
I managed to graduate from grad school in May. I defended (successfully) in January, so I'm a Ph.D.
I got a job at a law firm in Alexandria VA. The field of law is intellectual property, and it's been fun. I'm moving into the city of Alexandria on Thursday, so now I'm liberal and green. :-) no just kidding.
Hope things are well in Jersey and the family is adjusting well.
Posted by: BV | August 26, 2008 10:02 PM
Congrats Dr. Ben. Are you originally a Nova guy? Are you close to home. Excited for you about the job.
Blessings brother.
Posted by: Reid | August 27, 2008 07:30 AM
1. Macs are no better (and are often worse) than Windows based machines, with the added bonus that you get to pay a vertical monopoly premium! Go Linux if you want something actually good.
2. "If I find in myself a desire which no experience in this world can satisfy, the most probable explanation is that I was made for another world." The obvious (logical) flaw in this sentiment is that C.S. Lewis did not experience everything there was to experience in this world, so he does not know that there is no experience that can satisfy his desire. C.S. Lewis is an interesting writer, but cogency is not his strong suit.
Posted by: John Jenkins | September 3, 2008 11:12 AM
Good point on the Lewis quote - certainly having "every experience" is impossible for any human being...so I take your point to be quite correct, but perhaps irrelevant? Perhaps it makes mine a bit weaker as well...but if we find emptiness is the infinite loop of experience chasing there does seem to be a transcendent "hint" in our longings.
Also, I have been pondering this question quite a bit...using Aristotelian/Thomistic categories.
Is evil/suffering/pain/death etc. essential/substantial or accidental to this world and human experience?
I find the answer from a framework of naturalism to say "this is essential...fundamental to the way things are." Yet this seems to be strange because we seem to create a "problem of evil" as if evil is a problem. In a theistic world, evil is accidental, not essential and hence a "problem" - but it only makes sense if there is a good world...somehow gone bad with an alien invasion of suffering which is constant and objectionable by the creature.
So...essential or accidental? The answer to this question seems to set one's trajectory in life.
OK, I am going to "post" this comment. Appreciate you John - wish we could hang. Let us know if you are ever on the east coast.
Grace to you my friend.
Posted by: Reid | September 3, 2008 11:22 AM