GOD and the Double BBQ
Sandwich
It is no secret that
America has become polarized. This is a fact that is manifested in so many
different ways. Traveling down the highway to Chicago, for example, I came upon
two successive billboards that I thought were striking examples of our divided
culture.
The first billboard
caught me by surprise: it consisted of an electrocardiogram of a heart that
suddenly stops beating. The caption read: When you die, you will meet God.
As we were passing through the
snowy night, I was unable to catch more details of this billboard. I do not
know who put it out or what I was expected to do. It really did not matter
because for a brief moment I thought about what the Catholic Church calls the
“Four Last Things” – Death, Judgment, Heaven and Hell. Think of these things,
Scriptures says, and you will not be lost eternally. The simple phrase served
to trigger in me a gentle yet fleeting reflection upon the meaning of life. I
am sure I was not the only one to make this quick reflection.
The billboard is clearly
polarizing since it is directed toward that strong vein inside the American
public that is turned toward things religious, spiritual and eternal. It is a
sector of the American public that lives amid the fast, superficial and
materialistic aspects of our pop culture yet is not entirely comfortable with
them. These Americans are drawn by God, family, honor and country. On the other hand, this
billboard would not appeal to other Americans who would tend to disparage the
message as backward and unenlightened.
The second billboard came
immediately afterwards and struck me by how contrary it was to the former. It
consisted of a massive BBQ sandwich with the caption: Happiness is a double BBQ
sandwich.
There
is nothing wrong with a double BBQ sandwich or even deriving pleasure from
eating one. However, the message behind this billboard is clearly materialistic
yet more subtly polarizing. There is no invitation to profound reflection.
Rather there is the quick insinuation that happiness can be easily bought by
obtaining the immediate object of our desires. In this case, gratification
equals happiness. According to the same logic, life should be a long succession
of gratifications.
This billboard represents a
second, more commercial, vein found in America that I call in the book, Return to Order, the perception of the
nation as a co-op. This perspective holds that individuals unite themselves
together in society as a means to facilitate each one’s inebriating pursuit of
happiness.
Under this view, an
appreciation of America is tied to its ability to make everything fun and
everyone happy. Like a co-op, those who hold this position expect returns on
their social union in the form of constant and instant gratification. Happiness
consists of participating in the excitement of a party economy that they hope
will keep on going.
Of course, we cannot generalize
and say that all Americans fit neatly into one category or the other. Sometimes
the two can be found in differing proportions inside the same person. Other
times, the same person might gravitate toward one or later the other. We might
also observe collective swings of the national mood towards one or the other
category.
As
our crisis deepens, this fascinating interplay of perspectives, this dramatic
clash of mentalities becomes the material for a great debate now taking place
in America over our future. This discussion is found everywhere—even on highway
billboards.
There are many categories that people have used to characterize
the nation’s polarization. There is red and blue, conservative and liberal, or
retro and metro. Perhaps it is the case to add yet another: God and the double
BBQ sandwich.
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