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  • The Power of Uniqueness: Why You Can't Be Anything You Want To Be
    The Power of Uniqueness: Why You Can't Be Anything You Want To Be
    by Arthur F Miller, William D Hendricks
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Monday
Nov142011

The Best and Worst of Humanity

Of all the stories about Steve Jobs in the recent Walter Isaacson biography, this one seems to capture his essence. In the hospital near the end of his life, Jobs was heavily sedated. The pulmonologist tried to put a mask over his face. Isaacson writes:

Jobs ripped it off and mumbled that he hated the design and refused to wear it. Though barely able to speak, he ordered them to bring five different options for the mask and he would pick a design he liked … He also hated the oxygen monitor they put on his finger. He told them it was ugly and too complex.

It's somehow not hard to imagine Jobs at an Apple keynote introducing "one more thing" - a "revolutionary" and "magical" mask. I'd probably buy it too.

The Best of Humanity

Reading Isaacson's biography made me appreciate Jobs even more. Whatever you think of him, he clearly brought out the best in many of the people who worked with him. Jobs transformed entire industries: personal computers, digital animations, music, consumer electronics, and more. He had incredible focus and an ability to lead where many others failed. He's one of those rare people who really did change the world, and not just once either.

His life reminds me of the doctrine of common grace. Wayne Grudem explains:

…all science and technology carried out by non-Christians is a result of common grace allowing them to make incredible discoveries and inventions, to develop the earth’s resources into many material goods, to produce and distribute those resources, and to have skill in their productive work. In a practical sense this means that every time we walk into a grocery store or ride in an automobile or enter a house we should remember that we are experiencing the results of the abundant common grace of God poured out so richly on all mankind. (Systematic Theology: An Introduction to Biblical Doctrine)

I'm typing on my MacBook Pro, with an iPhone and iPad a few feet away. These are part of my life. I could live without them (really!), but overall they are blessings in my life that I've enjoyed and used as tools for God's glory. I'm amazed at the ingenuity that went into these products.

Jobs represents some of the best of what humans were created to be. It's hard not to be amazed at what he accomplished. But that's not the entire picture.

The Worst of Humanity

I found myself sad as I read Isaacson's biography. Jobs wasn't a happy man. He left a wake of destruction and hurt. He sometimes made very unethical decisions. He could be callous to those who were closest to him. And he misunderstood and rejected Christianity.

It was tough slugging getting through parts of the book. I kept waiting for Jobs to become a sympathetic character. To say that Jobs had his flaws would be a massive understatement. Jobs really did represent both the best and the worst of humanity.

Just Like Us

It could just be that Jobs is a picture of all of us, except magnified. I see flashes of brilliance and evil in almost everyone I meet, including me. Everywhere I look, I see great ability and depressing wickedness, often in the same person.

I preached on Abraham yesterday. He's a man of faith. I marvel at his ability to leave home and to move into the unknown with his wife at God's beckoning. I am stunned every time I think of his obedience when asked to sacrifice Isaac. And I'm disgusted every time I read that he passed his wife off as his sister, and by the way he treated Hagar and his son Ishmael -- which is not too different from the way Jobs treated his own daughter, by the way.

This is where I'm reminded of who we are apart from Christ. At our best, we are very good. Brilliant, actually. But at our best we are still hopelessly lost apart from Christ. There are no great men or great women; there are only great men who are also tragically sinful and who are in desparate need of the transformation promised in the gospel.

Steve Jobs reminds me that there is so much evidence of God's image in people who don't even know him. "It would be good for us to reflect on our likeness to God more often," Grudem writes. But he also reminds me of our need for transformation. And he makes me look forward to that day when we will be fully transformed, and that we will be all that we were made to be in the first place.

In a strange way, Steve Jobs makes me grateful for the dignity of humanity and the image of God. And he also reminds me of how bad we truly are, and how good the gospel sounds to brilliant, broken people like Jobs, and like you and me.

Reader Comments (14)

Add Jerry Sandusky to this category, magnified even further. Much good and much evil all wrapped in one complex human package.

November 14, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterJohn S

Really interesting story about the mask. First time I'd heard that one. Definitely an iconic guy.

November 14, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterSarah

I completely agree with you. As a Christian, we have failed to humble ourselves and not helped a person like Steve Jobs to introduce Jesus into his life. It was the Harekrishna who fed and help Jobs in his spiritual seeking years.
Christians has totally failed and discriminated this Hippy looking man.

Looking back we can say negative and positive stories about him but what do we do from now on?
Are we willing to change? Are we willing to be transform into humbleness and live in humility before we judge and discriminate another? Are we willing to help and pray for each other? Are willing to make time for the Weak, Sick and Poor?
It's so easy to join and talk about the Rich and Famous while we forget those who needs us most.
Are we the Light and Salt of this earth?

November 16, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterGrant

"From the moment you slide your hand gently leftward to unlock the gate, you know Hell is now a different place ..."

November 16, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterGary

Hey Darryl, are your sermons in an audio format, somewhere they can be lisened to (e.g. SermanAudio)? Merci!

November 16, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterPJ

Hi PJ:

They're available on iTunes:
http://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/richview-sermons/id258633847

They're also available here:
http://www.richview.org/sermons/

November 16, 2011 | Registered CommenterDarryl Dash

Jobs was a pathetic, idolatrous human being and I'm not saying that to be critical.

November 16, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterAaron

We are ALL pathetic, idolatrous human beings!

Thank God for His mercy and grace.

November 17, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterArthur

Thanks, Darryl. I have been reading your sermon series on prayer (April '07). Very nourishing. I see it's not available in audio format, though. Shucks. Well, it's more savoring to read it anyway. Thanks again for supplying links to your sermons.

November 17, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterPJ

Oh! Nevermind. I found a few of them in audio format. Odd that it sounded like a weekly series, but I find them scattered. Ah well....

November 18, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterPJ

Arthur I agree we all are pathetic and idolatrous; I just meant Jobs was ten times worse.

November 20, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterAaron

People are born capable of bad and good things. We make our choice to be bad and some be good.

November 23, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterMary Lane | ac condenser

Are we then so corrupt that we are wholly incapable of doing any good, and inclined to all wickedness?

Answer: Indeed we are; except we are regenerated by the Spirit of God.


(Heidelberg Catechism, Q&A 8)

November 24, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterAbbey Road | Flux Capacitor

Aaron, I refuse to paint anybody as being better or worse when it comes to sin. We ALL fall short, and deserve to pay the full penalty for our disobedience.

God, in His love and Mercy, paid the price for us by sending His Son to be our substitutionary sacrifice, thus reconciling us to Himself.

November 25, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterArthur

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