Monday, April 25, 2011

the "Matrix" of the Kingdom of God



For the last month of my life, there has been a recurring theme repeatedly going on in my mind as to how life in the Kingdom of God relates to the nature of the Matrix movie.

One line always repeats itself in my mind. "Living from another world that has extraordinary effects on this one". This is a slightly modified phrase that I stole from one of Dallas Willard articles. It keeps going through my mind periodically as I go throughout my day. Whether this is from the Holy Spirit, my own mind, or a mixture of the both I do not know. I think that line clearly makes sense in a plain/simple no-nonsense reading of the New Testament. The early Apostles/Acts Church were really normal human beings that were living from another world that has extraordinary effects on this one. That is the only rational explanation for what the heck actually took place in the book of Acts.

Once again, I do feel like I need to give a reminder to those reading this that I am aware that the comparison between the Matrix and the Kingdom of God is not a completely flawless one (as with all analogies). There are flaws/shortcomings/incongruities with the Matrix and the Kingdom of God definitely, and some sketchy/New Age-ish implications that come from the Matrix too. Nevertheless, I believe that although the movie is over a decade old, it captures more of the essence/nature of the invisible Kingdom of God that we read about from the New Testament than mere technical propositions can. Technical propositions can only go so far to communicate the essence of something (e.g. a textbook definition of sacrificial love). It takes a narrative-like framework to more fully express the essence of a concept sometimes (e.g. a movie about sacrificial love).

(with certain qualifications) The Kingdom of God as outlined in the New Testament is so like the Matrix.



There are so many references to the Kingdom of God in the Gospels and Acts that I don't have room to refer to every single one here, but just a few. The topic that Jesus talked about most was about the Kingdom of God. Now what exactly is this Kingdom? I like Dallas Willard's interpretation, because it just makes so much sense when it is applied to the contexts in Scripture where the term is used. Dallas Willard says that it is the "range of God's effective will, where what God wants done is done". Because on earth right now, in a ton of places God's will is not done, and we ask for God's will to come into effect in more and more places, especially in our own hearts.


Now to the references:

Jesus said in John 18:36 that “My kingdom is not of this world. If it were, my servants would fight to prevent my arrest by the Jewish leaders. But now my kingdom is from another place.” From here, we know that his Kingdom right now is not in the physical realm where it is advanced through physical means (i.e. political/military force). The same goes with the Matrix and the "kingdom" that Morpheus, Neo, and Trinity are fighting to advance, they do not expand the "kingdom" of the Matrix ("unplug" people from the Matrix) through physical/political/military ends (although sometimes they do have specific missions for other purposes that encompass this stuff like the famous lobby scene), but by living from "another world" that has extraordinary effects on this one.

In Romans 14:17, Paul says that "the Kingdom is not of physical eating and drinking, but righteousness, peace, and joy in the Holy Spirit". Those 3 things in the Holy Spirit are non-physical/invisible, yet real things. You can't describe the colour, weight, location, height, width or any physical characteristics of righteousness, peace, and joy, although they can have physiological effects on the physical body. The same with the Matrix. One cannot say to Neo "Hey Neo, where is the Matrix?". Neo cannot "show" the Matrix to the person to experience only with his/her five senses while he/she remains in the physical world. In Luke 17:20-21, Jesus says "The Kingdom of God does not come with your careful observation, nor will people say, 'Here it is,' or 'There it is,' because the kingdom of God is within you." The same goes with Neo.

I believe that at certain times in the New Testament when the term "the Kingdom of God" is used, sometimes it is referring to something in the future. But sometimes it is referring to the present moment. Like right now. One piece of biblical evidence (on top of the entire book of Acts) is Acts 14:22 when Paul and Barnabas said to the churches in Lystra, Iconium and Antioch that “We must go through many hardships to enter the Kingdom of God." Clearly Paul and Barnabas are not saying we have to suffer in order to attain salvation in the next life. That would clearly go against the "justified by grace alone" theme that Paul writes about all over the place in his Epistles. But I believe that what Paul and Barnabas said here only makes sense if the Kingdom of God here is understood as "actively being involved in fulfilling God's story on earth right now and being a part of what he's presently doing now on earth while being in interactive relationship with him." If that definition is inserted into the phrase "enter the Kingdom of God" in Acts 14:22, then it makes sense, because it is something that we enter into and are a actively a part of now. The same thing goes with Neo. After Neo "converts", he is actively involved in the expansion of "Zion" through the Matrix.

In 1 Corinthians 4:20, Paul says "For the kingdom of God is not a matter of talk but of power". Power can be defined as the ability to produce the effects what you want to effect, effectively. The Kingdom of God is not escapism where one escapes into another reality that is remotely unattached and unrelated to "normal" everyday life. It is a matter of living from another world that POWERFULLY produces extraordinary effects in the "normal" everyday world as evidenced in the Gospels and the book of Acts. Similarly, Neo did not just enter a form of escapism where he stops living in the "normal" everyday life. On the contrary, he entered a reality that had powerful effects on the "everyday" one.


1 Corinthians 2:6-14 says:

We do, however, speak a message of wisdom among the mature, but not the wisdom of this age or of the rulers of this age, who are coming to nothing. No, we declare God’s wisdom, a mystery that has been hidden and that God destined for our glory before time began. None of the rulers of this age understood it, for if they had, they would not have crucified the Lord of glory. However, as it is written:

“What no eye has seen,
what no ear has heard,
and what no human mind has conceived”—
the things God has prepared for those who love him—

these are the things God has revealed to us by his Spirit.

The Spirit searches all things, even the deep things of God. For who knows a person’s thoughts except their own spirit within them? In the same way no one knows the thoughts of God except the Spirit of God. What we have received is not the spirit of the world, but the Spirit who is from God, so that we may understand what God has freely given us. This is what we speak, not in words taught us by human wisdom but in words taught by the Spirit, explaining spiritual realities with Spirit-taught words. The person without the Spirit does not accept the things that come from the Spirit of God but considers them foolishness, and cannot understand them because they are discerned only through the Spirit



If Morpheus tried to explain this to another person who has never experienced the Matrix before, it would sound like utter folly. It would sound ridiculous. It would sound retarded. Until the person experienced it him/herself. After Neo got thoroughly/holistically/irreversibly converted he was able to understand not the "wisdom of the world" or of physical reality, but he was able to understand the "secret"/"hidden" wisdom of the Kingdom of God, that tells us that we were previously of "the world" aka "The Kingdom of darkness", but then we were delivered from it (Ephesians 2:1-5, Colossians 1:13). The same goes when the student of Jesus tries to communicate spiritual truths to someone who has never stepped into the Kingdom. It sounds absolutely ridiculous. But for that student of Jesus to try to communicate spiritual truths for someone who has just thoroughly/holistically/irreversibly experienced the "new birth" (truly being born-again) it is true/priceless/treasured wisdom.


I think these parallels are extremely important for us modern day Protestants to understand. I cannot stress this enough. How far we have strayed from norm of New Testament Christian experience is very saddening to one who has started to actually experience the Matrix of the Kingdom of God. I see it like this. Imagine Neo, after experiencing the Matrix himself, writes letters to his children, so that his children can one day pass them down to their children and so on. So he writes letters describing the Matrix, it's nature, how to navigate through it, what to expect from it, how to train oneself to cosntantly remain in it, "agents" to watch out for and how to deal with them, how to live from it in order to have extraordinary effects in the physical world etc. Then, imagine several generations later, Neo's grandchildren's grandchildren read these letters and try to imitate Neo and experience the kind of life Neo experienced, but just imitate the surface by-products/physical effects of Neo's typical life in the Matrix with a monkey-see-monkey-do sort of legalistic carbon copy of his descriptions accompanied by merely "parotting" his sayings all the while never learning to really live from this invisible, yet parallel reality. But they are very technical in their understanding of the Matrix, debate amongst one another about the small technicalities in his letters, and feel guilty about not being able to live the life that Neo was able to live. They remain living in and from the physical world and try to produce the extraordinary effects they see without living from the parallel world, the Matrix. But they keep studying these left-behind letters of Neo and build seminaries to understand its meaning better. Ladies and Gentlemen, that's kind of the picture we have today in the North American Church.

In order for someone to imitate Neo, he has to operate from the same alternate reality that Neo operated from. One cannot imitate Neo by putting the emphasis on trying to conform his external behaviour to Neo's external behaviour. One imitates Neo by living from the same alternate world that he lived in that has extraordinary effects on this one.

One does not dodge bullets from the enemy by trying to dodge bullets.



Although this guy's imitation of Neo is impressive to the public (it really is), if he tried that while terrorist was shooting bullets at him, he'd die in a moment.



One dodges bullets from the enemy by living from another world that has extraordinary effects on this one.


The same goes with the student of Jesus wanting to learn how to bless those who curse him, not fear man but fear God, or learn to not worry in all types of situations that are stressful for the nondisciple. These things can be learned by following Jesus. They are not just unrealistic expectations that Jesus tells us to do but where we constantly have to fail and ask for forgiveness after inevitably failing without improvement. By the grace of God they can be learned and Jesus expects us to learn them, master them, and teach others (in the Great Commission). Teaching people to do something is not just merely telling them WHAT they should do (e.g. a basketball coach teaching a basketball player how to master fadeaway shots by saying "just make them!") but teaching them exactly HOW they can master it (e.g. a basketball coach teaching a basketball player how to master fadeaway shots by "breaking his shot down" and going through each ineffective part of his shot with him and encouraging him). But we must remember that it is basically impossible to fulfill the commandments of Jesus if we remain in this physical world only. We must learn to live from another world that has extraordinary effects on this one in order to experience those effects. And that comes from learning from the "Morpheus"es that have experienced it themselves and who can likewise personally train those with less or no experience in it.

I am so grateful for my "Morpheus"es who have experienced the Matrix of the Kingdom of God first-hand and who have, after mastering things themselves, have taught me how to steadily master things in the Matrix myself. Dallas Willard, Jan Johnson, Richard Foster, and Frank Laubach have been my Morpheus"es, with the first and the last being the most helpful with my personality. Dallas Willard is truly like no other. You won't find too many people like him. He teaches you (with more practical help from Jan Johnson) how to live from all 5 dimensions of your being (thoughts, feelings, will, body, and social relationships) in the Kingdom of God, how to submit and grow in all these areas, and in turn, to produce visible effects in the physical world from the invisible Kingdom of God. The Matrix of the Kingdom of God is so awesome.

These Morpheuses have taught me how to practically remain in the world while not being of it, especially in a 21st century context (since advice would have to be modified somewhat to apply it to "the world" which takes different forms in different centuries [I'm sure Morpheus' tutorial to Neo would be somewhat different if Neo lived in China rather than America]). It is important to know how distractions can lure us right into the trap of the barrel of an agent's (demon's) gun.

As Dallas Willard writes in Renovation of the Heart about emotions:

"By contrast [to the person who is mastered by emotions/feelings], the person who happily lets God be God does have a place to stand in dealing with feelings - even in extreme cases such as despair over loved ones or excruciating pain or voluptuous pleasure. They have the resources to do what they don't want to do and to not do what they want. They know and deeply accept the fact that their feelings, of whatever kind, do not have to be fulfilled. They spend little time grieving over non-fulfillment. And with respect to feelings that are inherently injurious and wrong, their strategy is not one of resisting them in the moment of choice but of living in such a way that they do not have such feelings at all, or at least do not have them in a degree that makes it hard to decide against them when appropriate.

Those who let God be God get off the conveyor belt of emotion and desire when it first starts to move toward the buzz saw of sin. They do not wait until it is moving so fast they cannot get off of it. Their aim is not to avoid sin, but to avoid temptation - the inclination to sin. They plan their path accordingly."


Moving on, we continue with John 3:1-8:

Now there was a Pharisee, a man named Nicodemus who was a member of the Jewish ruling council. He came to Jesus at night and said, “Rabbi, we know that you are a teacher who has come from God. For no one could perform the signs you are doing if God were not with him.” Jesus replied, “Very truly I tell you, no one can see the kingdom of God unless they are born again.” “How can someone be born when they are old?” Nicodemus asked. “Surely they cannot enter a second time into their mother’s womb to be born!” Jesus answered, “Very truly I tell you, no one can enter the kingdom of God unless they are born of water and the Spirit. Flesh gives birth to flesh, but the Spirit gives birth to spirit. You should not be surprised at my saying, ‘You must be born again.’ The wind blows wherever it pleases. You hear its sound, but you cannot tell where it comes from or where it is going. So it is with everyone born of the Spirit.”

In this scene, Neo experiences a "rebirth", but this is not a physical rebirth, just like how Jesus said that in order to enter the Kingdom of God you must be born of "water and spirit". When Neo falls into the water after he gets "unplugged", I think that signifies baptism somewhat. Speaking from my own experience of living from the Matrix of the Kingdom of God (It's been roughly 2 and a half years), the "rebirth" hasn't always been a pleasant/happy ride. There are times where it's rough. But then I am being transformed to the point where life doesn't necessarily always have to be pleasant/happy. I mean, it's the Matrix! The adventure of all the ups and downs of fighting for Zion vastly outweighs the comforts of an ignorant life of friends revolving around "central perk" (I have nothing against the show friends, although "central perk" here illustrates what "the world" is like in North America).

I also think the narrative-framework of the Matrix helps me understand Luke 9:23-24 better.

Then he said to them all: “Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themselves and take up their cross daily and follow me. For whoever wants to save their life will lose it, but whoever loses their life for me will save it.


Before, I understood the content of what Jesus said, but not necessarily what he meant. It didn't really make sense to me and I couldn't comprehensively understand the heart of what he was getting at. But the movie the Matrix helped me understand it a bit more (and also experiencing it first-hand myself). Before Neo entered the Matrix, he was a computer programmer living a "normal" earthly existence. He had to give up that lifestyle and "deny it" in order to enter into the Matrix. If he were to "save" that "normal" lifestyle, he would never be able to experience a truly fulfilling/abundant life. Whereas if he gave up and "denied" that "normal" lifestyle in the physical world, he would be able to experience a truly fulfilling/abundant life.

Morpheus is not saying to Neo that "I'm going to be mean and won't let you into the Matrix unless you impress me by giving up your life 100% that would subjectively give me good feelings about you". He is basically describing the decision objectively. It's logically impossible to simultaneously fully live the life he lived before while fully living life in the Matrix at the same time. Morpheus is not being a jerk. He is just an intersection sign that shows two roads going in opposite directions that follow from it. One cannot be 50% "rebirthed" in the way that Neo experienced "rebirth" after taking the red pill. It's 0% or 100%. Jesus was not being a jerk too. He, like Morpheus, was just plainly laying out the options with their consequences.

Jesus always had the truth of God in his mind to interpret reality. The truths of the Kingdom of God were saturating his human mind 24-7. That's why he could always pick up a random everyday object in the middle-eastern culture that he was in and casually give illustrations about the Kingdom of God from them. Just like how if a young guy/girl likes another young guy/girl, whatever they see, they will somehow relate it to the target guy/girl that he/she likes. This is how Jesus was with the Kingdom. He constantly meditated on Scripture in his human mind. How was that like? I think it was like 1:03-1:06 of this youtube clip.




Metaphorically speaking that is. His interpretation of reality was always an interpretation using the paradigm of the invisible Kingdom of God upon the visible physical kingdom.

That enabled him to casually stop the attacks from the demons (agents), and even cause them to run away from him.

Oh yea, and he also resurrected from the dead just like how Neo did in the end of the movie. By the way, happy Easter everyone. The Good news of the Gospel of the Kingdom of God is not only the mere forgiveness of sins. Jesus coming to earth, dying on the cross, and resurrecting from the dead is good news because it allows us to get unplugged from the Matrix! The Good news is that we get unplugged from the Matrix not only after we die, but even right now in this present moment. As Dallas Willard said, "if you want to get into heaven, don't wait t'il you die, start now".

Living from another world that has extraordinary effects on this one. Thanks for helping me understand the Kingdom of God Wachowski Brothers (directors of the Matrix).

4 comments:

  1. Can't believe no one has commented on this. This is a great, a very great topic. At my blog I've written a few things on the Christian meaning in this film, and I hope to write more, but only as God wills. Wachowski brothers and whoever pulled the first Matrix movie together are either geniuses, or incredibly used of God, who can make man from clay, woman from bone, and clothe dead bones with flesh to make new people.

    I am an Orthodox Christian with roots mostly in the bible, and I live my life in Christ in much the same way as the crew of the Nebuchadnezzar. Watching that movie is always, for me, a religious experience (in the usual meaning of that word, though for me inappropriate, because Orthodoxy says 'religion is a sickness, Christ is the cure'). But watching it, always is like looking at an ikon: it brings to mind constantly the words of scripture written in the Book and in my own life, one after another, cascading in quick succession, bringing the Word into me, and me into the Word. It is (and I seldom use this overused word) awesome.

    My Pentecost morning has started right, reading your testimony. I hope we meet again.

    Yes, I am unplugged.

    http://cost-of-discipleship.blogspot.com/2008/10/dreaming-of-heaven.html

    http://cost-of-discipleship.blogspot.com/2011/05/matrix-revisited.html

    http://cost-of-discipleship.blogspot.com/2011/05/occupied-territory.html

    Go with God.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hey, thanks for your comment.

    Good to know that others also find rich analogies in the Christian walk from the Matrix.

    I can see that you are really into Eastern Orthodox stuff. That is amazing. I began to delve a little into that stuff a couple years ago.

    Curious, how did you stumble across my blog?

    ReplyDelete
  3. I was looking for an image to use on one of my recent blog posts, and the first image in your post came up. I was surprised and started to read what you'd written. This morning, a further surprise that I hadn't noticed before, you are Chinese by ethnicity. I like your profile picture a lot, too. It makes me see a man who doesn't want me to look at him, but beyond him, to Jesus. This is one of the characteristics of a disciple of Jesus: like the Holy Spirit who lives in him, he wants only to glorify the Son of God, Him who reveals to us the Father. Everything is full of the glory of the Holy Triad, even the explanation I've just written of your profile image. This demonstrates how we are taken up into the Divine Nature when we follow Christ, who came for no other purpose than that we should be one with Him, as He is One with the Father and the Spirit: théosis, becoming by grace what Jesus Christ is by nature, God's adopted children, one of the family.

    I am blessed to make your acquaintance, brother.

    ReplyDelete
  4. wow. I am breathless now. First off, I never knew a picture I posted on this would show up so early in a random matrix picture someone searched for. Second of all, the stuff you just talked about resonates with the themes going on in my life for the past few months! I totally feel what you're talking about. Interacting with all 3 members of the Trinity in their respective roles. Eastern Orthodoxy rules.

    I am blessed to have come across you too brother.

    ReplyDelete