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Selfishness or selflessness? Hard to find many defending selfishness or saying a word against selflessness. Yet these two concepts are intertwined in thousands of years of philosophical debate over materialism and immaterialism. While these two philosophical ideal appear as opposites, they each are, at most, half of reality. Indulged in, each can lean toward a self-centered view of the world, the materialist surrounding himself with all that he can grasp, the immaterialist indulging in a cocoon of isolation from which he never emerges.
As most of us go about our daily lives, it may seem hard to conceive
of the libraries of books filled with one side arguing that all that our senses
constantly perceive is all that there is, while another school of thought just
as vehemently asserts that it is all illusion, that the material is a false
cloak covering spiritual reality. Which
is right, and which is wrong, and does it matter? Can we bring the ideas together?
To shorten a very lengthy debate, materialists contend that
the history of the progress of mankind is the story of overcoming physical obstacles
and learning how to make the elements yield to our control, resulting in
longer, healthier, more productive lives.
In similarly abbreviated fashion, the contention of immaterialists—sometimes
referred to as spiritualists—is that at the end of the day all that physical
“progress” means nothing, that its focus makes no one happy, that it chains
people to an aggressive pursuit and struggle against one another that fails to
bring lasting joy, instead feeding greed, covetousness, and hostility. There is much more to the arguments, but that
is their flavor.
To engage the debate on more practical terms, the
materialist might argue that the spiritualist, by rejecting a very material
world, is starving while living in a garden, dwelling in poverty amidst plenty. The spiritualist might reply that the
materialist may satisfy his appetites by feasting, but in the end he will still
die, and by failing to transcend his surroundings he will die unhappy, having
accomplished nothing lasting.
You may consider yourself partial to neither approach. That would be understandable and proper, for
man is by nature physical and
spiritual. The scholarly division is
contrived, unnatural, isolating indivisible halves of existence. The gospel of Jesus Christ, however, embraces
the complete man. When Jesus, as Creator,
“saw every thing that he had made” of a very physical earth that included man
and woman, He pronounced it all “very good” (Genesis 1:31). Later, in our times, Jesus declared, “And it
pleaseth God that he hath given all these things unto man; for unto this end
were they made to be used . . .” (Doctrine and Covenants 59:20) Furthermore, the scriptures teach, “there is
a spirit in man” (Job 32:8).
The material is real; we are immersed in it. As spirit children of a Heavenly Father, our
challenge is to put our spirits in charge of the physical things, to control
our environment as the Father does. The
physical is not here to slow us down or to bind our spirits. Neither is it an instrument of penance for us
to overcome and then be done with. The
material exists to facilitate our
development and enhance our being. We became
more when our spirits united with our bodies.
The material is here to be used, first for learning and then for doing. Joy comes in discovering how to use the
physical well. We are to subdue the
earth, to become masters over the physical, not masters from the physical or to escape from the material.
The evil is when we shorten our vision, no longer employing
the material for our growth and progression but becoming slaves to wanton
appetites, food and drink devolving into our gods of gluttony and drunkenness,
material things becoming objects of avarice instead of instruments of service. We come to worship our tools, betraying our
divine heritage as makers and wielders of tools.
The truth of the whole matter is found in the union of the spiritual
with the material. As children of God,
it is our heritage to become like our Father.
Growing in the love of God, we govern our appetites and enlist our tools
in the cause of ennobling one another.
The Master, Jesus Christ, explained it this way:
For man is spirit. The elements are eternal, and spirit and
element, inseparably connected receive a fulness of joy. And when separated, man cannot receive a
fulness of joy. (Doctrine and Covenants
93:33, 34)
God created this very material world out of available
elements, placed our spirits into physical bodies to learn how to control material
things. Christ was Himself born into a
physical body that He also might enjoy the union of spirit and element. Then He willingly surrendered that union in death so
that He might be resurrected from the dead, inseparably united as spirit and
body, ensuring that for all of us the separation of spirit from body would be
merely temporary while the unity of spirit with body, and the joy of that
union, could last forever.
In so doing, Christ, and each of us, may receive the fulness of eternal joy that only our combined nature can achieve.
In so doing, Christ, and each of us, may receive the fulness of eternal joy that only our combined nature can achieve.
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