I watched a great documentary a few years back called: The Great
Leveller. It was an exploration of Death and Life. It focused on the two most
studied primates in the world: the Baboon and the Civil Servant. It drew fascinating
parallels between the lives of the two: both lived in a hierarchical civil
structure, with a Dominant Alpha at the top. Interestingly, your value in the
food chain extended from the Top - [the highest in perceived value] the Alpha and
his immediate family [the royal court] - on down to the lowly peasant at the
bottom of the food chain [the lowest in perceived value]. The Alpha of the
Baboons was echoed in the Secretary General of the Civil Service but this hierarchical
structure is found throughout our culture – indicating the profound influence
our genetics on our social structures.
In the Baboon clan the Alpha decided who ate. The close bond of family
guaranteed easy access to food but the further out from the royal family you
were the lower your perceived standing in the community and the greater the
difficulty in securing the necessities of life; with some enduring profound
humiliation in order to acquire food.
There was a ceaseless struggle to get further up the ladder, to get
higher up the tree – to establish some
security for oneself.
As part of the study, the Baboon diet consisted in a daily dose of burgers
and fries and so the health of the clan members was regularly checked. Curiously,
while one might expect their poor diet to have adversely impacted health across
the clan this did not turn out to be the case. In fact, health levels were more
accurately correlated with the individual’s position on the social ladder
than could have been corroborated based on diet alone. It was noted that the cell
walls of the Alpha’s heart were the thickest and strongest, with the communities
getting progressively thinner and weaker the further down the social ladder the
individual stood; until we came at last to the bottom of the food chain and the
heart of this poor soul was treacherously weak to the extent that a bad fright
could cost them their lives. Interestingly, these elements were found to be
reflected in the lives of the civil servants; with the rates of heart attacks
and quadruple by-passes significantly higher among the lower clerks than among
the highest levels in management. Among the lower clerks life was a relentless
shit-eating contest; respect was at a minimum while demands were at a maximum –
remarkably similar to the lives of the baboons.
Stress then, it seems, was the deciding factor in good physical [even
mental] health.
Near the end of the study it was noted that there was one baboon that
had escaped the attention of the researchers. This baboon didn’t play the games
the others did; possessed no obvious inclination to climb the ladder; seemed to
socialise for its intrinsic worth and value rather than as a manipulative play
in a game for social advancement and seemed, generally, to just act as a sort
of observer of events. Intrigued, the researchers ordered this individual to be
assessed and, against all odds, it was discovered that the cell walls of the
heart of this baboon were every bit the equal of the Alpha’s – just as strong
and healthy, despite the diet.
What conclusions did they draw from this? That pulling out of the Rat
Race and living a quite life in the country would be better for you than
engaging in this relentless and poisonous game of social advancement; which is
exactly what one civil servant had to do before life in the city killed him.
As I reflected on this over the years, the term Alpha struck my
imagination. I thought about the Almighty being referred to as the Alpha and
Omega and reflected on the significance of the thought that Deity is the Prime
Alpha. The gospel teaches that we are the children of God – the Prime Alpha.
That this Prime Alpha is motivated by profound love; who hears the prayers of
the humble and who declare “before you have asked, behold, I have answered”, “who
knows what you are in need of even before you do.” I thought about the
emotional and spiritual value of internalising the experience of being a child
of the Prime Alpha – of realising that you exist under the loving watch care of
the God of all resources and how this sense of cosmic/spiritual belonging could
impact your health and decisions; how it could free you from the ‘Game’, free
you of the need to engage in the degrading game of jockeying for social
advancement. That you could place all your real needs before your Almighty
Father and rest in confident assurance that they would not go unmet; no more
would you need to humiliate yourself or ‘sell your soul’ to those who wish to ‘push
you down’ just to get by.
I found it intriguing to reflect on the thought that the price of
remaining a child of the Prime Alpha [God] is to live as a child of God, to
bear the fruits of the divine that dwells within us, to manifest our potential
for God-likeness, – that we “Love one
another as I [Jesus] have loved you.”
While Baboons are perfectly obedient to their animal natures, the free
will children of the God of Free Will have a true choice: we can give in to the
inclinations of our material and animalistic nature and abide by the brutal
ethics of the jungle; where cruelty is the norm and pitiless competition the
rule, where Might makes Right, and where the strong are free to prey upon the
weak and the vulnerable; or we can aspire to live as the children of the Prime
Alpha – to live without fear and inspired by love, where kindness is the norm, Brotherhood
the foundation, and co-operation the rule, where Right makes Might, and where strength is wedded to compassion and
tenderness of heart leads us to enfold the vulnerable and weak in our arms that
we might nurture, strengthen, protect, and ennoble them. By so choosing we can make
our animal natures subservient to our spiritual natures and thereby begin the
process of removing the ‘mark of the beast’ from our characters and thus will
the Kin-dom be established on Earth.
I know my choice.
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