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Next to Godliness

Cleanliness is next to Godliness, or is it?

Have you ever heard the saying that “Cleanliness is next to Godliness”? I would like to challenge that notion and ideal. I do not believe that how clean a person is has any relationship with their being God like.

First of all, any person of religion would be opposed to being God like, as that would be blasphemy, so operating on the ideal that being clean makes one God like would be morally wrong for that reason enough. Beside that point, I do not believe in any way that God is a neat freak. In fact I rather believe that God has a slight preference to mess and chaos.

Look around.

This garden, although designed by people is full of plants who are interesting to view because of their uniquely different appearance. 

On the assumption that God created the Earth and everything in, and on, it, we would discover that there is very little that is clean, neat, or orderly. Mountains jut up on the surface of the earth, rivers take random paths across the land. Deserts mess up whole areas. Trees litter the ground with their dead and fallen leaves, and grow in random placements, not in evenly spaced rows. Death is messy, and bugs are annoying.

So why would any God who supposedly loves things spic and span, create such messy things? Why do people think that order is so good, that trees must be planted in a row, or flowers must be coordinated by color? Why do we feel it necessary to keep each blade of grass cut to the exact same length, on an entirely weed free, perfectly green, lawn, and with the edges trimmed as well? Why must every house look the same, why must every hair be in place? Why do our shirts need to be ironed and be free of lint, or free of cat hair. Is a perfect world, where things are perfectly ordered a better, or more interesting world? I do not believe it is, nor do I believe it is anywhere near to being Godly.

Not that long ago I was in an art group and one lady was telling a story of a time she taught art. At that time she asked everyone to draw the most interesting fence they could imagine. To her surprise every one drew a perfect fence, straight and correct, every section exactly like the other. She pointed out to them that their fences were not interesting, but were actually rather monotonous and boring. While they may be functional in reality, the sterility of their appearance made them uninteresting to the eye. She drew an older corrupt fence, with some planks missing and others slanted, her fence, which would be considered an eye-sore in real life, was far more interesting from an artistic perspective.

As such when we create generic landscapes and cityscapes, where everything is neat and in a row we are making things less appealing and more generic. We may be getting farther and farther away from Eden when we try to get closer and closer to God. So I suggest that we respect Gods wishes for a bit more disorder and a bit more chaos in the world, and allow our gardens, homes, and clothing to be a bit more haphazard and less strict if we really want to make God, and our artistic minded friends, happy.

In short, quit cleaning up Gods dust.  He/she just keeps putting it back anyhow. 

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  1. otherdeb (Deb Wunder)

    On June 3, 2008 at 4:55 am


    Thank you – Just what I needed today!

    I posted a link to it in both my blogs.

  2. JVB

    On June 3, 2008 at 1:02 pm


    hahaha, so true. It’s the imperfection that makes things perfect. Thanks for the share.

  3. Ruby Hawk

    On June 3, 2008 at 7:01 pm


    I don’t believe that I am a neat freak but I like cleanliness and order. Now when I had young children I would have appreciated this attitude, great piece of writting.

  4. Liane Schmidt

    On June 17, 2008 at 2:38 pm


    Interesting perspective. I enjoyed reading this piece.

    Best wishes.

    Sincerely,

    -Liane Schmidt.

  5. Adam K

    On June 22, 2008 at 8:52 pm


    The universe hangs in perfect balance – if the earth were one mile closer or further away from the sun (at its peak distances) life on earth would not exist. The formation of life ultimately boils down to enzymes. Cells, and ultimately life, are based on enzymes. The probability of enzymes forming randomly (through random chemical reactions in water given perfect temperature and water properties (hardness, pH, etc.)) is approximately one in ten to the four hundredth power. Suffice it to say, left to chaos, it’s fairly improbable that life would exist. It doesn’t seem reasonable to say a God who created such a delicate universe (one so opposed to chaos) doesn’t value order. I’m not saying God doesn’t value spontaneity, creativity, and the beauty of random formations; I’m just saying there’s two sides to every coin, and no matter how you look at it, this universe is very ordered. Death is messy, but it’s very necessary for life (return nutrients to the ground, overpopulation). Bugs are messy, but it’s amazing what they do to keep the earth beautiful (pollination for starters). God hardly random.

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