“The eye isn’t satisfied with seeing, neither is the ear filled up by hearing.”
Ecclesiastes 1:8 CEB
A new study shows that novelty-seeking behavior is not the problem researchers once thought, if it is combined with “persistence and a sense that it’s not all about you.”[1]
John Wesley warned against the craving for new things—what he called “the desire of the eye.” He cautioned that our desire for novelty can never be satisfied, no matter how often we indulge it.[2] Indulgent spending is the same as throwing money into the sea, he said.[3] Spending money on wants rather than needs is the same as robbing the poor of the resources God gave each of us to use according to God’s purposes. Novelty-seeking can cause us to sin when we use our money simply to indulge our desire for something new rather than advancing God’s desires for the world.
But the new research says that when novelty-seeking is combined with persistence and “self-transcendence,” a greater connection to creation and humanity is forged and, with it, the ability to balance one’s needs with the needs of others.[4] When today’s United Methodist churches invest money in new technology, worship spaces, and programs, we need to ask where we fall on the novelty-seeking scale: are we just satisfying our “desire of the eye” or truly using God’s resources as God intends? As individuals, we need to ask ourselves the same hard questions before we buy the hottest game, latest gadget, or newest fashions. Only when that “something new” contributes to the building of God’s kingdom are we being responsible stewards of all that is God’s.
To think about: How can I begin to decrease my spending on “desires of the eye”?
[1] John Tierney, “What’s New? Exuberance for Novelty has Benefits,” The New York Times Company, http://www.nytimes.com/2012/02/14/science/novelty-seeking-neophilia-can-be-a-predictor-of-well-being.html?_r=1&scp=1&sq=neophilia&st=cse (accessed March 7, 2012).
[2] General Board of Global Ministries, “The Sermons of John Wesley: ‘Original Sin,’” Sermon 44, II.10, The United Methodist Church, http://new.gbgm-umc.org/umhistory/wesley/sermons/44/ (accessed March 7, 2010).
[3] General Board of Global Ministries, “The Sermons of John Wesley: ‘The Use of Money,’” Sermon 50, II.1, The United Methodist Church, http://new.gbgm-umc.org/umhistory/wesley/sermons/50/ (accessed March 7, 2010).
[4] Tierney, “What’s New?”