Patheos
 
Emily’s First Question
January 23, 2015 by Michael Novak
 
EMILY: What separates the Bible from a book of moral fables such  as Grimms’
 Fairy Tales?  
GRANDPA: The Bible confronts you with a choice about your future. It lays a 
 challenge before you: to accept God as God, or not; and to accept His 
offer of  friendship with Him, or not. 
The wonderful books of fairy tales and folk tales in many different 
languages  amuse you, frighten you, delight you – but they do not give you such 
an 
abrupt  challenge, and do not call you to change your life at a radical 
level. 
One thing someone pointed out to me, and then I learned to see for myself, 
is  that every book in the Bible, especially in the Jewish Testament, hinges 
on a  free choice. Adam and Eve, Cain and Abel, Abraham with Isaac, King 
David – all  were faced with choices to make. In one chapter, King David is 
faithful to his  Lord, and in another, he betrays his Lord. Thus the 
overwhelming questions we  learn to face are: What will I do next? How do I 
intend to 
change my life, or to  go on living in the same path? 
We wouldn’t know unless God had revealed it, that the Creator is 
essentially  a force for good, even for love, not a malicious Creator or an 
absurdist. 
The  Jewish Testament does not reveal everything all at once. It limns  
characteristics of the Creator little by little, and it also sometimes makes a  
sketch and then does it over, altering it. To do this, the Bible uses many  
literary genres, many tones of voice, many points of view. Some stories are 
told  a little ironically, almost playfully. Some have a seriousness that 
clearly  intends to say: “This is the literal truth. Pay attention.” One 
hears this tone  of voice in the Ten Commandments, for example, and in many 
other places. 
The essential point of the Jewish Testament, in my view, is that the 
Creator  of all things – that immense power revealed in terrifyingly 
tempestuous 
seas,  the crack of thunder, and blinding flashes of light, the sort that 
teach us how  helpless we are out on the high seas in the middle of a storm, 
sheltered only by  the wooden sides of a boat – is not hostile to us. On the 
contrary, He invites  us to be His friends, even to live in Him and He in us. 
Sometimes too, we see all around us only meaninglessness. We call on God, 
but  there is only silence, only emptiness, only dark and dry desert air. We 
can find  testimony to this experience even in the most celebrated of 
believers, such as  Mother Teresa, St. Thérèse of Lisieux, St. John of the 
Cross. 
Whole books have  been written to guide us through the dark nights in which 
God allows us to  experience abandonment and pointlessness. 
Given the range of experiences it gives us, human life of itself is not  
altogether clear about whether God is hostile to us or friendly to us. 
The Bible from start to end makes two loud and clear points: in it, the  
Creator warns that we will be much besieged, left alone in a desert, buffeted, 
 without any sense of meaning or solace or comfort. Even God’s son, Jesus, 
was  reduced to saying as He hung upon the Cross: “My God! My God! Why hast 
Thou  forsaken me?” On the other hand, and at the same time, the Bible tells 
us that  the Lord, despite all these bitter trials, gathers us under His 
arm as a hen  gathers its chicks, and that He extends His love to us. His is 
not always a  sweet love, but sometimes a trying and testing love. 
Maybe some people want a God who is always sweet, always giving comfort,  
always giving consolation. That is not the God described in the Bible, either 
in  the Jewish Testament or in the Christian Testament. Consider the story 
of Job.  Consider the story of Jesus – or, for that matter, of the eleven 
Apostles who  met horrific deaths. (Tradition holds that St. John the 
Evangelist alone died a  natural death, at Ephesus, which we visited with Nana 
just 
weeks before her  death.) 
If you are seeking only sweetness, you ought not to come to Judaism or  
Christianity. “Those He loves, He makes to suffer.” 
Reading these texts slowly and often, meditating on them, one is driven to  
conclude that the Jewish God and the Christian God – without question, they 
are  related – is a tough God, raising up a tough people. But the 
overwhelming  evidence of existence is that He conceived of this universe and 
created 
it out  of love, out of goodness, out of outward-going generosity, even in 
the face of  our own betrayals, turnings away, sin, and sometimes malice. 
The Bible rams this  point home more concretely and more deeply than Plato in 
his Symposium  and Aristotle in book 12 of his Metaphysics. 
God does not want in return the friendship of slaves; He wants the 
friendship  of free women and free men. As the much-loved French poet Charles 
Péguy 
puts  it: 
When you once have known what it is to be  loved freely,
Submission no longer has any taste.
All the prostrations in  the world
Are not worth the beautiful upright attitude of a free man as he  kneels.
All the submission, all the dejections in the world
Are not equal  in value to the soaring up point,
The beautiful straight soaring up of one  single invocation
>From a love that is free.[1] 
EMILY: Admittedly I find this answer somewhat unsatisfactory  since the 
hinge of your explanation is that the Bible asks a person to face  moral 
choices and free will; yet nearly every coming-of-age story could be said  to 
do 
the same thing, just in a more structured narrative. In fact, after your  
explanation I am MORE inclined to read the Bible much in the same way I would  
read Alice in Wonderland.  
The original story places Alice through a series of events and  challenges 
that are really only connected by her progress through Wonderland,  and 
during her journey she is constantly learning lessons of deep-thinking and  
morality, while being challenged and required to act and react along the way.  
While the figure of Jesus is that of a teacher, Alice is a student of the 
world,  and yet I find myself learning many of the same moral lessons from 
Alice as I do  through Jesus while reading the Bible. Jesus simply lacked the 
Cheshire  Cat. 
I say this not as a critical judgment of the Bible, but more for  
clarification. 
Why is the Bible treated so differently from other books of moral  fables, 
especially given that there are many “kid-friendly” versions of the  Bible 
and picture-book-style renditions of the stories within the Bible that can  
often be indistinguishable from other children’s books? 
GRANDPA: I must think about this, and in the next installment of “Emily’s  
Questions” offer a reply.

 

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
  • [RC] Th... BILROJ via Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community
    • Re... Dr. Ernie Prabhakar

Reply via email to