Robot Love. We love. We want others to know we love them. At some point we are asked for something specifically: a gift registry, a birthday wish, things we ourselves wouldn't care to give; we get a rebellious twinge at the feeling that we are being instructed how to show our devotion. To truly show our love we want our gift to be creative, to appear as though it comes from the heart. Sometimes, the perfect demonstration of love is as simple a sacrifice as following through with, what is to us, a meaningless request.
Robot Sin We had an argument the other day. It was over chores, but the topic could have been anything. Husband said something out loud to me that I've said a thousand times myself in action to him, "Why can't I do what I want to do for you?" he exclaimed, "You're trying to make me into this...robot!" I responded acerbically, "If we were Adam and Eve in the garden of Eden you'd be recorded as saying, 'I ate from the tree 'cause I ain't no robot, God.' (vocalizing a poor Shaft imitation) And everyone would blame Adam for the fall of man." We were suddenly laughing at the image: Adam and Eve, standing leaf-clothed in the garden of Eden, talking robots and sin with God.
It doesn't really matter who ate first; anyway, Eve would have TOTALLY fallen for the bad boy Adam.
Robot Forgiveness We forgave all and forgot most (except for what we think is funny and useful), and moved on: We talked about robots and sin.
The Humans Are Dead Humanity died, humans die, man fell, because we are not robots. We have free will. We can choose to disobey. We seem to have forgotten, free will also means we can freely obey.
Robot Purity. Glorified Waste. And yet, obedience to God (purity in general) is often portrayed as boring or dull: Characters in dramas that live even slightly upright lives get depicted as empty-headed automatons. Purity is treasured publicly primarily through celebrating its loss: It is now a right of passage for starlets to claim they're going to "shed their wholesome image" not realizing that this very routine makes purity maintained far more rare and unique; making selling it truly robotic. Talk Shows, Dramas and magazines bolster mistakes and makes heroes out of those who simply sit in the ashes of their burned bridges, rather than rising from them. We've forgotten the phoenix, the flames and the rising above. We've mistakenly begun to admire the ashes of a land laid waste instead of the victory which makes them beautiful by contrast.
Which Robot? Which is more robotic: To obey the demands of our gullet and temptation to the point of great predictability, or to obey Truth and act in love?
The truth is, I have to rebel against my complex human programming in order to obey My Lord. To Love Him with all my heart, soul, and mind and to Love My Neighbor as much as I seem to adore myself has proven to be against my primary code. It is the most difficult and un-robotic (not automatic)goal I will ever strive for.
Robot Song "The Humans Are Dead" Just for laughs and because we like Flight of the Conchords (yes, there's a bit 'o swearing).