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Saturday, December 17, 2011

Why We Love Great Stories, like Twilight - Part III of the Saga

My friends, are you beginning to see that I am not so much writing about Twilight as I am any good story that exposes what gets lodged deep down inside of you by demands, efficiency, procedures, and the like?

So what is this thing that glares at us, after reading a story that moves us and lures us in? What are we looking at that makes us feel that our lives are dull by comparison?
Here is what stared at me after being drawn into Twilight.
Romance- Edward loves Bella with a stunning, shocking, undeserving kind of love. Sound familiar? He has the power to crush her in an instant, but uses it to protect her instead of wielding it over her. He doesn’t give in to everything she wants; because he has better perspective than she (he’s been around a hundred years longer). He takes great care in making sacrificial choices for her welfare, and lavishes grace and understanding on her when she screws up – even when ways in which he could easily jump to conclusions that would make him angry. Now isn’t this the crux of the gospel? That Jesus denied himself because of His true love for us? We were made to long for this kind of love, which can only be completely found in God.  We feel the ache for it in reading these books, and make the mistake of believing we have fallen in love with a fictional character.


Altruism- The patriarch of the vampire Cullen family is Dr. Carlisle Cullen.  He was the son of an Anglican pastor, who led raids against witches, werewolves, and vampires. He became a vampire against his will as a small boy, when his father put him in charge of a raid. When he knew what he had become, he rebelled against it. He tried to destroy himself, which is not easy for a vampire to do. When that did not succeed, he wandered, loathing himself, becoming hungry and weak. He saw a herd of deer passing by and realized that he ate venison in his former life. Out of this realization his new philosophy was born: He could exist without becoming a demon (by restricting his diet to animals, and eventually controlling his desires for anything but). Being a very intelligent person, he studied various disciplines and eventually found his calling: saving human lives. It look him two centuries to perfect his self-control, but now, immune to the scent of blood, he practices as a doctor in Forks, caring for human life.

Each member of the Cullen family became a vampire in situations which found each powerless to choose otherwise. The evil desires they have are met with a deep fear of becoming monsters, which motivates them to undergo a long, arduous, painful process of mastering self-control; this allows them to live ethical lives with purpose, fulfillment and in relationship to one another. So, the classic vampire whose soul has been lost and inhabited by evil spirits is, through this process, morphed into one that shows strong characteristics of a real soul.

Doesn’t this sound like us, to a certain degree? Born into original sin, but then born into God’s family, and with His power, we have self-control (a fruit of the Spirit) and begin to think more of others than ourselves?  As much as we feel we don’t live up to this selfless life, we still want it, and find it very attractive, even heroic, in others.

Mystery- Don’t get me wrong here. I am in no way suggesting there is any likeness between the darkness of vampires and God. There is no darkness in God, He is light. He abhors darkness. But don’t you think the same part of us that is so drawn to Edward’s mysteriousness is the same part of us that is drawn to God’s mystery? I caught myself entranced in this character; the life he lives is so different than ours. 

Because we have been created to long for God, we have been created to long for the mysterious. The unknown. The unexplainable.

God has revealed much about Himself through His word, but has left much for our questioning and for our imaginations. I think we find ourselves mesmerized by Edward because in him we find a melding of these three elements – unselfish love, a desire to do good, and mystery. The mysterious life of a  vampire – not as an evil, dark, grotesque life as have seen vampires portrayed in folklore – rather, one that they did not choose for themselves and are rising above – now this is deeply alluring kind of mystery.


Adventure – Why is it that most of us feel less than 100% satisfied with our jobs? Do you see your job as an adventure, in which you play a significant role – in which your gifts are so critical that the whole mission weighs on them? This is what God made us for - whom we experience this rarely on earth – but we still want it. The Twilight series ends with a battle that hinges on Bella’s talent. The world vampire government – the Vulture -makes a false accusation against Edward and Bella concerning their child, Rename, which puts her and the entire Cullen family in grave danger. The Cullens band with other vampire allies around the world to fight against them. Bella’s talent as a shield protects those around her from Volturi psychic attacks, which forces them to back down. It makes a desk job pale in comparison, doesn’t it? Now this would be job satisfaction!


Immortality - Throughout the Twilight novels Bella is haunted by the reality of becoming old woman if she stays human. Aren’t we also haunted by old age? If we could choose a life where we wouldn’t age and grow feeble and forgetful and lonely we would. And so we empathize with Bella, and under the bed covers wonder if this life where we get tired, don’t need sleep (the Cullens don’t even own beds), don’t age, and are able to remain with those we love forever wouldn’t be worth becoming a vampire for.  We want this because we were made for this. We were made for all of these things – romance, adventure, altruism, mystery, to be lived out for an eternity.


And this is our destiny in the coming kingdom.






My blog friends, what is Christmas to you? Is it a race against the clock to get everything done? Yes, unfortunately it’s that for me too. But on the 25th, or the 26th, when the world hushes around you for a moment, ponder this: Christmas celebrates the beginning of all of this for you. It celebrates the beginning of a kingdom of eternal romance, mystery, adventure, and perfect altruistic love. The ache you feel for all of this is there for a reason – you were made for it. Christmas is your Breaking Dawn. ---alg


P. S. Hang in there, faithful readers. Only one left to go. Now we know what these stories – these fairy tales – have exposed about us. Now we realize what it is we want, and why we are captivated by them, but what now? What do we do with it? What is our tendency? And what should we do with it? Next blog – the last of the saga.

Sunday, December 4, 2011

Falling Prey to Twilight - the Saga - Part II - "Twilight and the Myth"

In my last blog post I admitted that I fell into the Twilight black hole. There, I was mesmerized by passion and romance and adventure and mystery; it lasted until I read the words “The End”. At that point, I felt the acute angst of the forces of real life pull me back; kind of like the scene from Somewhere in Time – an old Christopher Reeve and Jayne Seymour movie – the scene where Reeve's character pulls the penny out of his pocket dated 1979, and his passion and romance and mystery back-in-time world which he had arrived at via time travel came to an anguishing abrupt halt.

I asked the question: Why? Why me? Why a good portion of the rest of the world? Did you know that Twilight has been translated into 37 languages – all with differing cover artwork that expresses the spirit of the book in unique cultures?

I heard from a few of my good Christian friends after the last blog post. They asked the question “Should I read it”? Hard question to answer. If you are looking for something to build your faith, strengthen your character, or add to your library of great literary works, no, at least, not directly. But, I further told them I loved them, and urged them to give it a try if they don’t mind the month-long hangover when finished (read the part above about the forces of real life pulling you back).

I googled “Twilight from a Christian perspective” and got some interesting viewpoints. I’ll put a couple of links here if you are interested in taking a look.

http://christianteens.about.com/od/christianentertainment/a/TwilightDebate.htm

In these articles you’ll see how many Christians have concerns that the main characters of the story are vampires, which, traditionally, have no souls and are inhabited by evil spirits. They struggle with some moral gray areas in relation to Bella, who wrestles with her fleshly desire of Edward, and is somewhat ho-hum when considering giving up her soul in order to be with Edward forever.

On the flip side, some Christians (including me) praise Twilight because abstinence remains to Edward a non-negotiable, to which he stays true until marriage despite immense desire. They also laud the portrayal of the characters’ high esteem for the value of human life, and for its treatment of the weighty importance of one’s soul – at least in Edwards’ mind.

But again, I’m not trying to determine if Twilight is worthy for Christian eyes, whether they be fourteen-year-old or forty-year-old eyes. It appears there has been plenty written on that. I’d like to go a little deeper, below the upper crust of moral fiber down into the hot magma that is drawing people down into it – to live there for a while, and when done with the books, to want to stay there.

I’d like to go down into the magma of myth.

You see, I think we miss the heart of our story as Christians when we behave as if all that matters is morality. Absolutely this is important, but, we need to go deeper to see why it is important, and what motivates us to act - what lies at the core of who we are, what we were made for, what we desire, what we ache for. Where does love and longing come from? Deep down in the magma of our souls. Remember we are made in the image of God, and He loves and He longs and He desires, or else, we would not exist, because He WANTED us and still WANTS us (I know, most days that’s hard to believe).

Thanks to the Enlightenment period which preceded us, we are all about facts and numbers and efficiency and bullet points and logic and intellect. The heart, (which actually has more to do with our decision making than we realize) is no longer needed. So, to get down to this level of the heart, we need a little help.

This is where stories come in to play. Fairy tales.  Myths - not in the sense of something many believe but that is not true (thanks, Enlightment period for “enlightening us” on this derivative meaning of myth). Myth - meaning, a story that uncovers something. A story that digs something up within us that makes us feel something because of the way that God designed us. John Eldredge calls myth “a story that brings you a glimpse of the eternal”, and then he quotes a Christian professor Rolland Hein “Myths are, first of all, stories: stories which confront us with something transcendent and eternal…a means by which the eternal expresses itself in time” (1).

This, my friends, is what I believe the Twilight series has done. It has dug up something in millions of people; something many are completely oblivious to. They are staring at something eternal, something real for which they were created, but are not only unaware of what it is, but what to do with it.

What is it that this series digs up, that stares us in the face after “the End”? Let's talk - see next blog.

(1)    Waking the Dead, John Eldredge, p 25

By the way, I’m assuming all who are reading this have either read the books or seen the movies and am aware of the storyline. If not, and you are interested, here are some good summaries:

http://cliffnotebooks.com/tag/twilight - Cliff Notes of all 4 books, starting with the last book
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twilight_%28series%29  - short overviews – see “Plot Overview”