Isaiah 55:1-13
“Silencing the Noise”
28 February 2106 St. Andrew’s
Military Chapel Singapore
So, let’s play a little game of
product recognition. I’ll say a slogan and you tell me what company used it as
a tag line in their ads.
Between Love and Madness lies
obsession: Calvin Klein’s Obsession
Breakfast of Champions: Wheaties
Where’s the Beef: Wendy’s
Eat Fresh: Subway
Eat More Chikin: Chick Fil A
Have it Your Way: Burger King
Just Do it: Nike
Maybe She’s Born with it, Maybe it’s
…: Maybelline
The Ultimate Driving Machine: BMW
The Best a Man Can Get: Gillette
We Answer to a Higher Authority:
Hebrew National
Where a Kid Can Be a Kid: Chuck E.
Cheese
There are some sources that say we
are exposed to about 5,000 ads each day. Now this doesn’t necessarily mean that
we actually see that many ads each day, but rather we are in close proximity to
advertising all around us. I found one study that agreed with that number but
said that we only really see about 400 ads a day, and that of those we only
really notice about 90 and are only affected by about a dozen ads a day.
We live in a world that is driven by
our purchasing power. The marketplace desperately wants our attention so that
we can consume the goods they are hawking. Because our time is limited, they
need to up the ante with the techniques and flashiness of the ads. How else can
one compete with school, work, after school products, our desire to relax and
travel, and all of the other places we feel we need to do to keep up with the
Jones’ (Pun partially intended).
Sometimes it seems as if the
American Dream (if that ever was a real thing) has been completely taken over
by a race to buy the next product that will solve all of our problems.
George Carlin once said, “Advertising sells you things you don't need and
can't afford, that are overpriced and don't work. And they do it by exploiting
your fears and insecurities, and if you don't have any they'll be glad to give
you a few by showing you a nice picture of a woman.”
Another comedian, Louis C.K. has said, “It seems like the
better it gets, the more miserable people become. There’s never a technological
advancement where people think, “Wow, we can finally do this!” … And I think a
lot of it has to do with advertising. Americans have it constantly drilled into
our heads that we deserve everything to be perfect all the time.”
Even Mark Twain, a king of one-liners, got in on the
criticism writing in A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court, “Many a small
thing has been made large by the right kind of advertising.”
Nor is this concern for advertising
and the marketplace a new idea. A minister named Martin Dean Everett wrote in
1932, “It is impossible to understand the American public without taking into
account the tremendous psychological effect of bringing up a generation of
people in a daily environment of advertising. It is impossible to escape the
advertising man; his sales talk assaults us in the morning newspaper, in the
street car, with billboards along the highways, and in his shameless use of the
radio. This means that from morning till night, in the midst of our work as in
our recreation, we live constantly in an atmosphere of intellectual shoddiness.
Every popular prejudice and vulgar conceit is played upon and pandered to in
the interests of salesmanship. Everywhere material interests and herd opinion
are strengthened to the loss of personal independence. The tendency is to think
and speak for effect rather than out of one's inner life. There is a marked
decline the ability to play with ideas, or to live the spiritual life for its
own sake. Hence a decline in civilization of interest, humor and urbanity.
Advertising tends to make mechanized barbarians of us all.”
What does all this have to do with the Isaiah passage?
Perhaps it’s that advertising has taken such a prominent voice that we actually
start to believe in the false promises of Madison Avenue over the promises of
God. This is powerfully stated by Simone Weil. “Between
a poem by Valéry and an advertisement for a beauty cream
promising a rich marriage to anyone who used it there was at no point a breach
of continuity. So as a result of literature’s spiritual usurpation a beauty
cream advertisement possessed, in the eyes of little village girls, the
authority that was formerly attached to the words of priests.”
In the midst of the din of
advertising, we tend to miss the still small voice of God speaking to us. The
voice that truly leads us to water, sustenance, and truly living. (Play Video)
God isn’t in a religion of materialism, of pursuing the rat
race, of not slowing down, of putting the market before others. A market-based
religion will never have enough. The faith that Isaiah is calling us to is one
that relies on God to fulfill our needs. Madison Avenue, despite how hard they
try to convince us, can never fill our deepest needs.
But, Isaiah doesn’t just stop at telling us to focus on God
for our needs and fulfillment. That would be too easy for a prophetic word. He
goes another step and tells us that we should call on unknown nations and
people and spread the Good News to them so they will run to God. God’s word
won’t return empty from those places, but will accomplish God’s purpose not
just in our lives but for the whole world. It is for this purpose that we have
been glorified by God.
We live our lives surrounded by many people hawking snake oil
to cure our woes. I don’t think any of our jobs or schools are compatible with
becoming Luddites and ignoring the world. In fact, we’re called to be in the
world for only in the world can we see the problems and become an effective
light of Christ pointing people to a better reality. Let us work together and
support each other to be amplifiers of the still small voice of God. Let us
seek those holy moments around us and point others to them so that for just a
moment, we all stop and see God at work above the noise. From those moments and
whispers, we become more attuned to God all around us, allowing us to see God
more and more each and every day. So let us go out from this place focused more
on God and less on Madison Avenue so that the trees of the field will clap at
the spreading of God’s light to the world.
2 comments:
Can we see the video? See - I read the whole sermon. :)
It was a music video from Casting Crowns: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DumlIIHSrsQ
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