Amos 8:4-8
Divided Attention and Cluelessness
Sabbath as Resistance to Multitasking
James Sledge July
27, 2014
There’s
an old joke about a preacher who, just before the sermon, performs the weekly
ritual of taking off his watch and balancing on the pulpit so that he can see
the watch face. A young boy, unfamiliar with this ritual, whispers to his
father, “What does that mean, Daddy?” To which his father replies, “Absolutely
nothing, son. Absolutely nothing.”
We
preachers can sometimes drone on and on, oblivious to the need to wrap things
up. But clock watchers in the pews are not always reacting to long winded
preachers. Sometimes they simply have “more important” things they’d rather be
doing.
Of
course it’s difficult really to listen when you’re clock watching or paying
attention to other things. I’ve heard claims that millennials, who grew up with
the internet and cell phones, have brains that are wired for multitasking, but
study after study has shown that when people, even young people, multitask, all
tasks suffer.
Are
you familiar with “phone stacking.” That’s when people who get together for a
meal or coffee take out their smartphones and stack them on top of each other,
agreeing not to check them until it’s time to go. If someone can’t hold out
that long and must check email or update his Facebook page, he has to pay for
everyone.
I’ve
never actually seen this done, but it’s an intriguing idea. I say that as
someone who has too often been guilty of checking my phone while in the midst
of conversations with family or friends. More than once I’ve found myself
embarrassingly lost in a conversation because my attention has been elsewhere. I’m
trying to break free of my phone addiction because I know that I can’t really
have a conversation while I’m checking my phone.
We
all know that. We cannot be fully attentive to another while multitasking. Not
everything requires our full attention, but you cannot really worship if you’re
checking your watch, you can’t really make love while watching the game on TV, and
you can’t really pray while checking stock quotes. Multitasking is a hazard to
most anything intended to be deep and intimate. That’s especially of true of
relationship with God and the life God wants for us.
In
our scripture verses this morning, the prophet Amos is upset with wealthy people
over multitasking.. They are keeping up with the expected religious
obligations. They are marking the sabbath, but all the while they’re watching
their clocks and keeping one eye on their profit margins. Outwardly they are
attending to God, but inwardly they are making business plans, figuring out
what corners they may be able to cut, what deceptive practices they might be
able to get away with, in order to make a bit more.
Amos
lived in a time when things were going well for Israelites in the upper tier of
society, owners and CEOs and those with big stock portfolios. But it was not
going well for the poor, and Amos warns that this will be the undoing of Israel
because Yahweh is a God with special concern for the poor and oppressed.
In our day, a lot of people, even
religious people, doubt that God actually intervenes in history. But I don’t
know that this makes us much different from the wealthy of Amos’ day. They obviously
didn’t worry about God intervening or listen to Amos. He was amazed at how
oblivious they were to the plight of the poor, but such cluelessness is a
common trait of multitaskers who always have one eye on profit margins or their
bank account.