It has been the rare woman I have met who engages her intellect on par with her emotion: who makes a fair fight of it. Most women I have known, including highly educated women, can be derailed from efficient pursuit of their goals by rushes of emotion: love, anger, disappointment, elation. We are creatures endowed with the qualities of our Maker, divinely blessed to experience emotion over a wide range. But we should not be a slave, in bondage to our emotions. We are charged to be disciplined, to subjugate our emotion to our intellect. To allow compassion to influence our choices but to make those choices prayerfully, soberly and with deliberation and focus.
There’s this great scene in the half-good Star Trek film First
Contact where Captain Picard and Lt. Commander Data are
approaching a hive of Borg which is assimilating the Starship
Enterprise. Borg, for the two of you who do not know, are very
creepy mechanical entities which assimilate technology and
biological forms to create these hideous zombie-like creatures.
It was a pretty good scene, hair standing on the back of your
neck, when Data—an android—opts to turn off the processing chip
which simulates emotion so he can better focus on the work at
hand. That accomplished, Patrick Stewart, a fine Shakespearean
actor again whoring his enormous talent in outer space
jumpsuits, retorts, “Mr. Data, there are times I envy you.”
As humans, we all are subject to our emotion. This is the
essential definition of courage: an overcoming of compelling if
not paralyzing emotions of fear and anxiety in order to
accomplish a goal. Military men and women going into combat and
first responders racing toward danger immediately come to mind,
but heroism asserts itself in many ways. Agoraphobics, who fear
open spaces, commit acts of heroism just by going outside to
get the mail. Military and law enforcement are vigorously
trained to repress emotion, to, ironically, become somewhat less
human in the name of serving humanity. Professional people, including corporate
types, school teachers, judges, etc., are routinely encouraged
to repress emotion. This is harder to do for some. I can do this
for, about, ninety seconds. I am a creature of emotion, as are
all human beings. But I experience emotion in a visceral and, at
times, overwhelming way. Over time, I have come to realize that
having emotion makes us human, but being emotional narrows our
opportunities. Ironically, the less emotional you are, the more
effective you can become. People who give their emotion free
reign are usually a pain to deal with and are often less
respected and taken much less seriously than the Poker Face
types who come across as reasonable and rational.
An essential requisite for effective Christian ministry is
sacrifice. Few of us are willing to sacrifice in any meaningful
way. Most of our fasts are a joke: miss a meal here and there. A
real fast is all day if not multiple days of sacrifice. Many of
us struggle with money, so sacrificial giving presents a huge
challenge. What saddens me is how few of us are willing to give
of our spirit, to sacrifice some small part of ourselves. I know
fairly few people and almost no women who have the inner
strength and resolve to forego defending themselves when they
feel accused. Having patience with someone is a rite of
sacrifice. It is our gift back to God to just let things go, to
not fixate and argue and defend ourselves. To recognize when we
are dealing with an emotional if not irrational person, which
requires both patience and maturity to effectively do. Maturity
is not about not having emotion, it’s about subjugating our
emotion to our reason, It is a choice to honor God by denying
ourselves the visceral satisfaction of venting our emotion.
I used to write this comic book series about a super-hero who is
constantly getting calls from his self-absorbed, histrionic
mother nagging him about trivial matters. The hero is in a
running gun battle while on his cell with his mother nagging him
about his girlfriend (who lives with them) using up all the
toilet paper, so Ma bought her own stash of toilet paper and is
now refusing to give a roll to the girlfriend unless the
hero—still running from bad guys firing automatic weapons at him—agrees to bring some home tonight. The hero agrees but ma
keeps nagging, “Sure, that’s what you said last time, then you
show up at God-knows-what hour and no toilet paper. I’m not made
of money, you know…” Ma can hear the impatient distraction in
the hero’s voice, can presumably hear the gunfire and so forth,
but is concerned only with 99 cents’ worth of bathroom tissue.
This, for me, is the mixed blessing of women: their innate
ability to access their emotion while often becoming blinded by
it.
It’s in every movie. They’re running from the scary monster.
What happens? The girl falls down. You can see it coming a mile
away. I have personally never observed this. Most sisters
I know can dash. But this is how women are portrayed in the movies,
as the x-factor, what we call in screenwriting, The
Complication. Bringing in The Girl introduces an unstable element
to an otherwise orderly progression of events. Unstable because
she is unpredictable. She is unpredictable because she processes
information through her emotion and she is usually less
disciplined about that process than the hero is.
Every movie, the hero (usually a male) is doing fine. He’s
building something, achieving some goal, making some progress.
And, maybe a half-hour into the movie, he meets The Girl and
everything goes to hell. His nose is so wide for The Girl that
he abandons his own judgment or refuses to see how her vanity,
childish meddling, interference, or capitulation to her own
emotion is jeopardizing whatever his goal is. Or he becomes
distracted from his goal in order to protect her. This is the
plot of every movie coming out of Hollywood: The Girl as an
impediment to the hero achieving his goal. It is an
unapologetically sexist message, one absorbed by women and girls
for generations: You Are Weak And Stupid And Part Of The
Problem.
Chemical Reaction:: Hormones make us a little crazy but it's just a simple chemical reaction. Don't let it own you.
Making Emotional Decisions
In the sixth chapter of Mark’s Gospel we find Herod Antipas, the
governor of Galilee, had married Herodias, his half-brother Herod II’s ex-wife
and his own niece (Herodias was the daughter of Mariamne II, third
wife of Herod the Great who was Herod II's grandfather, which made
Herod II Herodias' half-uncle. Lots of luck sorting that out). Herodias had
divorced her husband/half-uncle Herod II, and Antipas divorced his
wife Phasaelis so the two could be married. Although this is
a fairly common practice today and largely accepted within our
Christian churches as no big deal, remarrying while your former
spouse was still living is a serious violation of Jewish law. John
had embarrassed the governor by openly criticizing him for this
abominable marriage, which was how John ended up in prison in the
first place. At a feast for the governor's birthday Herodias’
daughter Salome performed what
is largely interpreted as an explicitly seductive dance—later
lionized as the Dance Of The Seven Veils, a tantalizing
striptease over the course of which six of seven large sheer
scarves are removed. Salome was, technically, Herod Antipas’s
niece’s daughter, and must also have been quite young (if you figure
Herodias, her mother, was likely early 30’s at most).
Salome's display got
Herod’s nose open so wide the governor shot off his mouth,
promising the young girl anything she asked for. This business
is rife with icky implications for this guy Herod, who seemed to
have a predilection toward not only much younger women but much
younger women he was related to. The implication, here, is that
Salome, most likely in her teens, seduced the governor and
may have done so at her mother Herodias’s urging. Herod’s earnestness in seeking to reward the
teenager suggests he may have begun thinking of ultimately
replacing Herodias with Salome. This was, after all, not a fine
arts performance from Lincoln Center. This was, essentially, a
lap dance, likely approved and encouraged by the girl’s own
mother. Given the opportunity to ask Uncle Stepdad Herod for
anything her heart desired, Salome was coached by her conniving
mommy Herodias to ask for the head of John The Baptist. It is
unlikely Salome even knew who John The Baptist was. Someone her
age would likely have asked for a car. Beyoncé tickets. This
girl asked instead for the grisly decapitation of a man she did
not know. A man who’d done absolutely nothing to her.
The last thing Herod Antipas wanted to do was kill John The
Baptist. He feared John, and he knew actually killing John would
make the prophet a martyr in the eyes of the people and possibly
inspire unrest. But Herod allowed himself to be trapped by the
wiles of a woman. Herodias, whose vanity had been injured and
insulted by John, wanted John dead.
It is this nonsense, a woman’s passion overwhelming her logic,
that is the classic cautionary tale. I have seen this in real
life over and over: our weakness for women destroying
ministries, destroying lives. Yes, this sounds terribly sexist,
but it is nonetheless true. Most women I have ever met think
with their emotion. Most I’ve known are virtual slaves to their
emotion. Their choices are emotionally driven and their passion
dictates their action. The same can be said of the men who love
them, who set aside logic because of their desire for or loyalty
to these women. This is, in my view, weakness, an abdication of
a higher calling. We set aside logic and complicate our lives by
welcoming in these emotional, vain, often petty creatures,
driven by impulses, by color and light, rather than by reason.
We turn over important choices, made by sober and patient
review, to persons whose logic is routinely overwhelmed by their
emotion and whose values are corrupted by a lifetime of
capitulation to their own vanity. This is Adam and Eve. Abraham
and Sarah and Hagar. This is Jacob and Rachel, who neither knew
nor trusted God. This is Samson and Delilah. David and
Bathsheba. This is Job and his ignorant wife. Solomon and his
ten thousand bedmates. Lot’s idiot wife, disobeying God and
looking back. Ike and Tina Turner. Yoko Ono and The Beatles.
Chris Brown and Rhianna. Amy Winehouse.
I am not anti-woman, I am anti-stupid. Sensuality is a kind of
hypnotism, convincing us to do and say things we know we
shouldn’t. I believe Herod was drunk with lust for Herodias’s
daughter, which, rather than annoying his wife actually pleased
her; it was likely her plan all along: get Herod to make Salome
a public promise. Once Herod shot his mouth off, that would be
that. Herodias, whom the record suggests understood nothing
about the greater ramifications of John’s political status,
simply wanted revenge. She thought about no one other than
herself. Her energy, her intelligence, her wiles, were employed
only to serve her vanity. Her vanity was the preeminent driving
force of her life, and she was apparently a creature of emotion
and not logic. She neither trusted nor particularly respected
her husband, whom she manipulated seemingly at will. And this
guy, Herod, was led around not by his vanity but by his lust,
handing over a critical and delicate political matter to this
person of selfish illogic and her equally clueless child. This
made even less sense considering Herod, a man of considerable
prestige and power in the region, could have quietly and
discreetly bedded almost any woman he wanted. His willingness to
buy Salome’s affection (if not specifically her sexual
surrender) spoke of an obsessive and addictive personality.
Addictions cause us to abandon our values, our logic and our
commitments.
John The Baptist was a delicate matter, Herod’s Cuban Missile Crisis. Herod had neutralized John not by killing him but by removing him from the stage—something John himself should have done. The smart move would have been to allow John to live out his remaining days in exile and despair, John’s disciples withering to the faithful few. But Herod was weak. Herodias, who likely knew nothing of the intricate politics of the matter, simply wanted John dead, so much so that she was willing to prostitute her own daughter to achieve that goal. Herodias comes across as stupid and selfish and childish, The Complication that wrecks the story. Hers is a cautionary tale to sisters who become slaves to their passion and vanity.