January 21, 2010

Titanic Arrogance: SINKING THE UNSINKABLE

Titanic Arrogance: SINKING THE UNSINKABLE
[written by John Meakin]

Titanic was the largest and most luxurious ship afloat. No expense had been spared in her construction. She boasted opulent state rooms, luxurious dining rooms, sumptuous smoking rooms with ornate ceilings and magnificent candelabra, and an elegant grand staircase. She had elevators, libraries, a swimming pool, a Turkish bath, a gymnasium, a squash court, even an eight-piece orchestra—everything to satiate the desires of 325 first-class passengers as well as all the rest. She was at the leading edge of technology, inspiring awe and wonder in those who saw her. And most amazing of all, her builders assured, she was absolutely unsinkable.

Why is it that tragedies like the sinking of the Titanic continue to attract and capture the imagination? Cameron himself comments in the official book on the making of the movie that Titanic’s story is like a great novel that really happened: “The story could not have been written better . . . the juxtaposition of rich and poor, the gender roles played out unto death (women first), the stoicism and nobility of a bygone age, the magnificence of the great ship matched in scale only by the folly of the men who drove her hell-bent through the darkness. And above all the lesson: that life is uncertain, the future unknowable . . . the unthinkable possible” (James Cameron’s Titanic, 1998).

The Titanic thus embodied a spirit of invulnerability characteristic of the times. In fact, when at the beginning of her maiden voyage one of the deck hands was asked whether the ship really was unsinkable, he replied, “God Himself could not sink this ship!”

It was an idle boast that would, of course, prove catastrophically hollow within a few days. Through a combination of fateful human decisions, unforeseen events and a curious twist of fate, the ship’s vulnerability was cruelly exposed and she sank in the space of two hours and 40 minutes, with the resultant loss of more than 1,500 lives.

But the disaster was caused by more than the combination of these circumstances. “The ship was not destroyed by an iceberg alone,” James Cameron’s Titanic asserts, “. . . it was also destroyed by a state of mind.” The book speaks of “an unseen force that [would] ultimately lead to the era’s downfall . . . arrogance ” (emphasis added).

The Titanic seemed invulnerable; people took GREAT PRIDE and put tremendous CONFIDENCE in the ship. But the scale and significance of the tragedy caused people to question the prowess of designers and engineers, and the effectiveness of new technology and scientific advancement. Such introspection and questioning can have a marked impact on human behavior as we RETHINK our perspectives and REASSESS our PRIOTIRITIES.

A LESSON ON HUBRIS

The God of the Bible, who is often derided as irrelevant or even nonexistent by today’s generation, has a great deal to say about human pride and notions of invulnerability. We are told that “God resists the proud” (James 4:6; 1 Peter 5:5) and that “pride goes before destruction, and a haughty spirit before a fall” (Proverbs 16:18). Human pride is like a cancer that eats, corrupts and corrodes. Sometimes God allows events to happen that puncture human pride and bring us to a greater sense of our vulnerability and mortality.

In the same way that a ship—or indeed any other expression of human pride and accomplishment—can fail, so too can the entire society that humanity has constructed. If certain parameters or laws that guarantee proper functioning are compromised, disaster will eventually ensue. Titanic was built to function within certain physical parameters and laws. When these were exceeded, she failed spectacularly.

Almost a century later, do we not tend to think of our own age as indestructible? We take such great pride in our human accomplishments, scientific advancements and technological progress. Yet so often God is left out of the picture. All too often we are ignorant of the spiritual laws and parameters that govern life.

And if, collectively, we live our lives outside the spiritual parameters that speak to such traits as pride and arrogance, is it possible that one day we might face an unprecedented disaster on a scale far greater than that which overtook the Titanic?

Certainly that is the message of the Bible — an instruction book filled with spiritual values and the godly wisdom that will guide us through perilous times.

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