Lego's wonderfully articulated Shelob. How did she become "evil?" |
A little child shall
lead them…
I find, alas, that I am in substantial agreement with the
old saw, “There’s nothing more boring than other people’s grandchildren or
vacation photos.” (There are exceptions, of course. Your grandchildren, for example, are certainly not boring. But I
draw the line at your vacation pics.) So I will be neither offended nor
surprised if – when I tell you that this essay is inspired by my grandson, Sam
– you click off immediately as you stifle a yawn. But let me make this attempt
to stay your hand: In what follows, I write not about how cute and clever Sam
is, but about how I am both moved and startled by the thinking, the philosophy,
the ethics, and – yes – the theology of a four-and-three-quarter year-old. Any
four-and-three-quarter year-old. Including, I am glad to acknowledge, your grandkid.
Years ago I was in the middle of, “The body of Christ given
for…” when another four-year-old, at the communion rail with his mother, interrupted
me with a hoarse stage whisper, “Psst, Pastor Dick… when was God born and who
were God’s mom and dad?” At one level, of course, this is standard, precious,
out-of-the-mouths-of-babes fare, but at a deeper level (what I mean by being
“startled”), these guileless questions and pronouncements elicit from me not an
indulgent grandfatherly chuckle but an open-mouthed, pondering silence.
Now, as a sixty-five-year-old theologian, I have an approach to this four-year-old’s question (I’ve even blogged about
it for grown-ups, and will again), but I don’t exactly have an answer. (By golly, when was God born…?) It is a question asked
by Aristotle and Aquinas, it is “What was there before there was something?” It
is a question explored by Jim Holt in his new book, Why
Does the World Exist? It is a question misunderstood by Richard
Dawkins, and it is a question that drives philosophers, scientists, and
theologians together as they stare into the light and into the darkness. It is
the question of a four-year-old. Startling.
It seems that after four years of college, four years of
seminary, countless hours of reading and advanced study, and thirty-five years
in the ministry, I might have had a readier answer than I did to Sam’s
question, from his child’s safety seat in the back of the car, “Grandpa, what
does God do?” (Sam’s emphasis was on
“do.”) My thoughtful formulation of
an answer took too long. As I started to say, “Well…,” Sam was on to, “Look, there’s
a loader!”
Sam is too young to have read The Lord of the Rings or Harry
Potter or to have seen Star Wars,
but he knows the essential stories because his dad is a Star Wars nerd and his
YA literature-specialist Auntie Anna is a Lord
of the Rings and Harry Potter
geek, as is his pastor-friend Mike. They are his resources for learning the
plots and the characters. But mostly he knows these stories because of Legos.
Not only does Lego make intricate, multi-piece plastic kits of such esoterica
as Gandalf’s fireworks cart, Harry Potter’s potions classroom, and Anakin’s pod
racer; it also produces on-line video versions of the stories. (These sometimes
veer too close to parody for an old Tolkien fan like grandpa: Ronald McDonald as part of the
Fellowship of the Ring sneaking into Mordor?!)
Sam mostly tells
me about these stories. He tells me which starfighter is piloted by Luke
Skywalker, he tells me which Lego figure is Hermione, he tells me how Samwise
picks up Frodo’s sword to fight off Shelob. But he also asks me. And what he mostly asks are questions like, “Why are the
Orcs bad?” “What made Voldemort be bad?” “Did Smaug have a mom and dad?” I talk
about how people sometimes turn to a bad life because they were mistreated by
grownups or they didn’t grow up knowing they were loved, which is why your
mommy and daddy love you so much…; I try to squeeze in an answer before Sam is
distracted by the passing garbage truck. And then there’s, “Grandpa, what made
Shelob evil?” Ah, “evil,” there it is. Good and Evil. I think I have a
systematic theology textbook here somewhere…
Sam likes his children’s songs CDs. He said to me, “Grandpa,
one of my songs says that Pharaoh’s army got drownded” (the old spiritual). “Yes,”
I say, “there was that time when the water rose up and drowned the whole army….”
“No, Grandpa,” says Sam, “God made
the waters rise up and drown them.” He
doesn’t say it, but I feel the implied follow-up, “Tell me about a God who
would drown a whole army, Grandpa.”
I am reminded of the description of the Bible as “not so
much a great answer book as a great question book.” The Bible’s questions are
our questions. Of course I have answers, or approaches to answers, for these
questions, based on the classic Lutheran combination of faith and reason. And I
look forward not so much to answering all of Sam’s questions in black and white
as to continuing the conversation with him as he grows. And of course I’ll tell
him I have questions of my own. “Lord, I believe; help my unbelief.”
It would be good if more adults could live with the
uncertainty of the Apostle Paul (“Now we see as through a clouded glass...” why
should we think we’ll know it all?) And in Lutheran theology, all questions
(and doubts) take us to Jesus and the cross. Sam loved learning about Jesus at
Vacation Bible School this summer. He talked about Jesus so much that at one
point I decided to seize on a teachable moment. In response to a little
misbehavior, I said, “You know, Sam, Jesus teaches us that we should treat
other people the way we would like to be treated.” Sam glared rather harshly at
me and said, “Jesus teaches us nothing. He’s dead on the cross.” I was reduced
to that open-mouthed silence for a few seconds. Then I realized that Sam’s
response was a combination of the oppositional stage he is in (Sam, time to
take a bath. “No, Grandpa, time for you
to take a bath!”) and the idea he came away with from Bible School: Jesus is
dead on the cross right now; at Easter he will come back alive.
My grandson the religious skeptic. May God grant us many
years of conversation. Because I realize that not only are the Bible’s
questions my questions. Sam’s questions are my questions.
3 comments:
Dick,
Thanks for the great blog. I have to confess Sam asked me why God drowned Pharaoh's army and as I struggled to formulate an answer in terms that would make sense to him I finally resorted to, "That would be a good question to ask Grandpa".
Joel
Wonderfully written, Dick.
Cousin John
Well put dad, I find that I come into less theological questions as a librarian but the result is the same. The WHY of things makes life difficult.
Well done!
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