Disney And The Tower Of BabelSample
The Tower of Babel
The world tells us that ambition is the key to accumulating wealth, fame, and glory for ourselves. The meta-narrative of work today is that it is the primary means by which we make a name for ourselves in this life and prove to the world that we are important, valuable, and worthy. We saw this clearly exhibited in the example of Walt Disney which we explored yesterday.
But human beings using work as a means of self-salvation is nothing new. Since the Fall, human beings have been using work to make a name for themselves, rather than to glorify God and serve others. Take the Babylonians as an example. In Genesis 11 we read the account of these ancient entrepreneurs discovering the incredible technical innovation of brick making. With the invention of the brick making process, the Babylonians could build better homes, roads, and cities—all wonderful things, much like theme parks and winsome animated movies; but driven by pride, the Babylonians’ ambition wasn’t to glorify God through their work. Their ambition, much like Disney’s was to make a name for themselves. They said, “Come, let us build ourselves a city, with a tower that reaches to the heavens, so that we may make a name for ourselves; otherwise we will be scattered over the face of the whole earth” (Genesis 11:4). And if there was ever a question as to whether or not our motives matter to the Lord, the rest of the passage provides the answer. “The Lord scattered them from there over all the earth, and they stopped building the city” (Genesis 11:8).
Creating a tower, a theme park, a new business, a piece of art, or a sheet of music is not inherently bad. Our cultural creations can and do reveal God’s character and love and serve others. But when we create something out of a motivation to make a name for ourselves, we are attempting to rob God of the glory that is rightfully His.
While Scripture makes clear that creating to make a name for ourselves constitutes improper ambition, the Bible makes equally clear that ambition can indeed be God-honoring, so long as it flows out of a response to the work Christ did on our behalf on the cross. That is the subject we will turn to in tomorrow’s devotional.
Scripture
About this Plan
Walt Disney is one of the greatest entrepreneurs in recent memory. His theme parks, movies, and other creations have brought joy to hundreds of millions of people across the widest array of age, race, and geography. So does it really matter why Disney created? Are motives for our work significant to God? As the Babylonians and others throughout Scripture make clear, to God, our motives matter a great deal.
More
We would like to thank Called to Create for providing this plan. For more information, please visit: http://www.calledtocreate.org/disney/