460: Want to write the Great American Novel? … First, murder someone.

Dreaming of writing that Great American Novel?
    Murder isn’t a bad first step. No kidding.
    This has become a key point in my talks about the turbulent transformation of media. I ask an audience: “Do you know what makes a bestseller?”
    I get various responses: “Great writing.” “A famous name.” “Oprah.” “A movie deal.”
    All of those answers are correct—all are connected with various bestsellers. But no one in my audiences ever mentions the central in-your-face truth about bestselling novels in America—

    CRIME!
    Our publisher John Hile has heard me give such talks. At one small gathering our college-age sons were sitting near us and looked skeptically at me as I made this point.
    John leaned over and whispered: “Just think of your Moms.”
    The chief book buyers in both of our households consume a steady stream of mysteries. My wife, Amy, even discovered that Bible scholar Marcus Borg is a lifelong fan of mystery novels—and she swaps newly found mystery writers with Marcus occasionally. In fact, I suspect Marcus schedules interviews with me (like this one, for instance) mainly so he and Amy, at the end, can swap their latest “finds.” (Marcus loves mysteries with strong central characters and either a historical or religious theme to the setting.)

Why is this important? I often meet with writers one on one, these days, listening to their book ideas—some of which are terrific in their exploration of spiritual themes.
    That’s why we just published Warren Petoskey’s “Dancing My Dream,” after a year of work to develop the book.
    That’s why, on Tuesday, I highly recommended Carol Tyler’s memoir about how WWII shaped her father’s view of the world—and shaped the next couple of generations of her family.
    That’s why on Wednesday we explored spiritual themes in TV dramas. (Think about the most popular series on television—and most are about …? Crime, that’s right.)
    That’s why we’re the publishers of the popular James Bond Bible Study.
    But I often ask writers, planning future books they hope to write: “Have you ever thought of writing a mystery?”
    I get skeptical chuckles.
    Sometimes, to make my point, I pull out a new catalog from some major publisher displaying upcoming books that the publisher hopes will hit the 100,000-copy “bestseller” threshold.

    Currently, I tote around Putnam’s really exciting-looking catalog for Fall 2009. Putnam now is part of Penguin, but historically this is the legendary publishing house associated with Norman Mailer, Vladimir Nabokov and Kurt Vonnegut. So, flip open the Fall 2009 catalog and what do we find? Fifteen new books are crime novels—while only 6 novels cover the rest of the literary cosmos. In that mix of 21 novels, Putnam’s will publish several books with terrific spiritual themes (even a thriller, “The Holy Bullet,” involving the Vatican)—but the big, bold “CRIME” theme looms like a fleet of Mack trucks barreling down the freeway of American media.
    This shouldn’t surprise people of faith. We are several millennia into a love affair with tales of ultimate good and evil. The world’s all-time bestseller—The Bible—is also one of the world’s greatest collections of crime stories.
    Still skeptical?
    Well, to firmly nail this point to the wall, I counted titles this week in the New York Times Book Review. Of the 15 books listed as Hardback Fiction Bestsellers, 14 are crime stories. Most of them (12) involve typical murders (as opposed to other categories of crime). Four mysteries involve vampire-like creatures and one is a science-fiction crime tale. But, clearly crime dominates. Then, among the 20 books listed as Mass-Market Paperback Fiction Bestsellers, 14 are crime novels—all 14 of these involving murder as the central crime, although four rely on vampire-like creatures.

My point here for you? This is a huge business in America: Last year alone, book buyers forked over more than $24 billion, according to the Association of American Publishers.
    So, if you’re one of the millions of Americans out there dreaming of writing a book someday, we strongly recommend that you:
    1.) Write about something close to your heart (something you know a lot about)
    2.) Explore spiritual themes (spiritual questions have fueled the furnace of great literature for thousands of years)
    3.) And, please—at least think about killing someone in the process?

PLEASE TELL US WHAT YOU THINK:

    This is a good time to sign up for our Monday-morning ReadTheSpirit Planner by Emailit’s
free and you can cancel it any time you’d like to do so. The Planner
goes out each week to readers who want more of an “inside track” on
what we’re seeing on the horizon, plus it’s got a popular “holidays”
section.

    Not only do we welcome your notes—but our readers enjoy them as well. You can do this
anytime by clicking on the “Comment” links at the end of each story.
You also can Email ReadTheSpirit Editor David Crumm. We’re also reachable on Twitter, Facebook, Amazon, YouTube and other social-networking sites as well.
    (Originally published at https://readthespirit.com/)

436: Readers Tell Us About … responding to terrorism & Cheeni Rao — plus spirituality in aging … and horror

WELCOME!
Once again, thanks to readers like you,
we’ve got your feedback to share …

OUR “BALANCED RESOURCES PAGE”
ON NEW YORK BOMBING PLOT
IS OPEN TO YOUR ADDITIONS

ON THURSDAY, we immediately established a BALANCE RESOURCES PAGE in response to police and FBI arrests of four men who planned to blow up two synagogues in the Bronx. This incident is a crucial moment for anyone who cares about the future of interfaith peacemaking efforts. If you’re wondering why that’s the case, just visit our Resources Page for more.
    AN IMPORTANT PART OF THAT PAGE is an open invitation to readers to share their thoughts with us and also to share other online links and statements they find helpful in putting this deeply troubling news in perspective.

    OUR FIRST CONTRIBUTION came from a Jewish reader who pointed us toward the wisdom of Rabbi Brad Hirschfield, who posted his own response to the bombing plot. I agree with the reader who forwarded this link to us—it’s a balanced column and well worth reading.
    IN PART, Brad writes: “If anything, this is a story about the efficacy of both local and federal agencies doing their jobs and keeping Americans safe. This is certainly not the “horror” that some groups are labeling it. The horror would have been if they had succeeded and people were killed or injured. But in this case, there was not even any damage to property! So let’s keep things in perspective and not stir the pot of moral outrage anymore than is necessary.”
    And that parallels our own “take” on the incident in our own Balanced Resources Page.

    DR. BENJAMIN PRATT, author of “Ian Fleming’s Seven Deadlier Sins” and a retired counselor who specialized for many years in working with government employees, sent along a thoughtful insider’s perspective on the news:
    My first response to the news was the feeling of gratitude—gratitude for the
sacrificial vigilance of these government workers who spend endless
hours focused on protecting all of us. My second response was to
think, “Well, now it is confirmed why she hasn’t been able to come to
dinner for the last 4 months…she has been working a case.” We have a
number of friends in the FBI, CIA, Border Patrol and often we suspect
they are on big cases. They are slow to respond to invitations because
they are working long hours. I am deeply grateful for their faithful
dedication, but I wish she could come to dinner.
    Then I thought about what I can do. As a person of faith, I can
pray for the courage to be an instrument of peace, a sower of hope
where there is doubt, a sower of love where there is fear and hatred. I can commit myself to be vigilant and vocal where I see fear driven
slander of my Islamic and Jewish brothers and sisters. I can join
hands with all people of faith to witness to the basic yearnings of all
traditions—love of God and fellow inhabitants of our planet, peace,
hope, social justice and economic fairness.

    THE COUNCIL of ISLAMIC ORGANIZATIONS in MICHIGAN, one of the major Muslim networks within the United States, immediately issued a statement—also offering balanced wisdom. Here’s the text:

    Council of Islamic Organizations of Michigan condemns attack on any place of worship.
    Four men were arrested Wednesday for allegedly plotting to bomb a synagogue and a Jewish community center and for planning to shoot down military planes. CIOM applauds our law enforcement agencies for preventing possible harm to either Jewish institutions or to our nation’s military.
    Defense of religious freedom is the foremost Islamic mandate: Holy Qur’an, 22:40, “For, if God had not enabled people to defend themselves against one another, (all) monasteries and churches and synagogues and mosques—in (all of) which God’s name is abundantly extolled—would surely have been destroyed.”
    The Islamic principle understood in the above quotation of a verse of the Holy Scripture is that of respect and protection of all places of worship, Jewish or Christian as well as Muslim, and all foundations built for pious uses. Acts of a few misguided individuals, acting against the principles of their professed faith must not be used to demonize Islam.
    Muslims request all people of good will—not to allow exploitation of this un-Islamic act of a few for others to promote anti-Muslim fear and stereotypes against “all” Muslims.

    ANOTHER READER SUGGESTED we provide a link to this fascinating story by William J. Dobson, a top journalist and scholar on global issues. Dobson’s story was written before these arrests, but it’s well worth reading in the present context. His subject? What the United States could learn from Singapore about the rehabilitation of “terrorists”—using Muslim scholars to correct the twisted impressions of Islamic teaching that may push some young men toward violence.

    CBS NEWS REPRINTED AN ANALYSIS PIECE FROM THE NATION—among the most solid, critical overviews of the news we’ve seen. A couple of readers sent this link our way on Saturday. As a journalist of more than 30 years myself, I have to say—Robert Dreyfuss’ analysis of the case against these so-called terrorists is very persuasive. Most important, strong evidence is surfacing that these so-called Muslims were marginal figures who weren’t active in an Islamic community. (Here’s New York Times coverage of the informant’s role in this plot.)

    WE WILL KEEP THESE PAGES “LIVE” through the weekend, if you want to add a helpful link or statement or share your thoughts. Just email us.

GROWING UP IN A STRICT RELIGIOUS
COMMUNITY IS TOUGH …
… BUT SOMETIMES THE SPIRIT IS STRONG ENOUGH

OUR INTERVIEW WITH CHEENI RAO this week, the hot young Indian-American writer who survived drug addiction and years of crime on the streets—to rediscover the tough spiritual strands of his Hindu tradition—drew a number of private reader comments.
    “I hope my parents find that story on your page. I don’t think they’d ever allow the book into their home, but I wish they’d … understand that we love them but we can’t just lock away all the stuff that’s happening inside us … like the man says: God wants us to be honest, but a lot of times we can’t,” wrote a reader who said she went through some very tough stuff in high school and college that she never could talk about with her parents.
    “We’re past it now, I think, but it could have been a lot better … I know I would have had tons less stress … if someone had let me even talk about this. Parents and all our family and all our friends wouldn’t let stuff like this even be talked about. Like don’t talk about it and it doesn’t exist.”
    “It does exist.”

    That was the tone of a number of emails. The woman who above lives in New Jersey. A woman from the Chicago area wrote, “I think it’s even tougher for girls than guys like Mr. Rao.” But, readers did not want their names attached to these notes. Thanks for sending them—even without permission to use your names. They show that these pressures exist all over the landscape for young adults. Cheeni Rao’s spiritual journey was tougher than most, which is why his memoir is such a powerful tale. But many of the truths in his memoir are shared by millions.

LET’S HEAR MORE
ON SPIRITUALITY …
… AND HORROR … AND AGING

    I ran into readers this week (as I traveled to several different cities for meetings) who mentioned both our Tuesday story on “The Gifts of Aging” by Missy Buchanan and our Thursday story on “Horror and Spirituality” by James Leach. One pastor of a large church, in particular, said that Missy’s 10 Tips for Better Ministry is destined to be mentioned in the pastor’s own email newsletter next week. It’s that kind of a solid piece.
    We didn’t hear much on either story via email notes from readers, though. Readers” attention this week was mainly focused on our provocative look at “Why We Treat Our Soldiers So Badly,” a series that is running over at www.OurValues.org. That national problem, which finally is receiving more attention in Washington D.C. right now, relates to many of our readers’ early preparation for the looming Memorial Day weekend. So, it’s timely on a couple of levels for readers.
    Also, by Thursday morning this week, many of our readers were scrambling to find out more about the bombing plot in New York.
    BUT, we still welcome your thoughts on both aging — and horror. And, no we’re not saying the two are related!

    If you missed those stories, though, click back and enjoy them.

PLEASE TELL US WHAT YOU THINK:

    This is a good time to sign up for our Monday-morning ReadTheSpirit Planner by Emailit’s
free and you can cancel it any time you’d like to do so. The Planner
goes out each week to readers who want more of an “inside track” on
what we’re seeing on the horizon, plus it’s got a popular “holidays”
section.

    Not only do we welcome your notes—but our readers enjoy them as well. You can do this
anytime by clicking on the “Comment” links at the end of each story.
You also can Email ReadTheSpirit Editor David Crumm. We’re also reachable on Twitter, Facebook, Amazon, YouTube and other social-networking sites as well.
    (Originally published at https://readthespirit.com/)

435: What connections do you see between Spirituality and … Horror?

HERE’S A “FIRST” for ReadTheSpirit: Horror and Spirituality.
    We’ve talked about scary stuff before. Way back in 2007, we published an interview with Bible scholar Marcus Borg, who is an insatiable fan of character-driven mystery novels, but we’ve rarely returned to the topic. We are aware that mysteries and scary stories in general are very popular with religious men and women. A number of famous religious writers, including C.S. Lewis and G.K. Chesterton, dabbled in both faith and fright.
    Plus, nearly every major religious tradition has horrific stories within its sacred literature.
    So, we invited author James Leach to write a short overview of a Horror-and-Spirituality conference he just attended in Indiana. If you care to add any thoughts on mystery or horror, perhaps to share one of your own favorite titles or authors, please send us an email.

Horror and Spirituality
By James Leach

    Horror writing and spirituality are two topics that don’t seem too far separated to Maurice Broaddus. “I found I was having these very engaged spiritual conversations at horror conventions,” he said.
    Maurice is a professional writer of horror fiction—which among other things means he has a day job as an environmental toxicologist, despite the recent success of his writing career.
    “I thought more people should be able to hear these conversations,” Maurice said, so he organized MoCon, an annual convention that focuses on horror writing and spirituality. The convention is jointly sponsored by Indiana Horror Writers, a group of professional writers, and The Dwelling Place, an Indianapolis church. I caught up with Maurice at MoCon IV this past weekend.
    MoCon is a writer’s convention so there were none of the bizarre costumes and strange goings-on found at fan conventions, nothing more exotic than a couple dozen participants, a book table, a raffle and an art display. Maurice describes MoCon as a family reunion, a chance to have some directed conversations over generous meals of good food.
    After the Friday night poetry reading, the convention got into full swing on Saturday with a panel about writers in relationships with supportive and not-so-supportive partners. Another panel examined the business aspects of writing with contributions from both writers and publishers. The final panel addressed spirituality and the writing life.

    Author Wrath James White began with an eloquent and lucid presentation of an atheist perspective. Maurice followed with comments from a Christian worldview. I had the sense I was listening in on a conversation that that been going on for a long time between two men who knew each other intimately and regarded each other highly.
    In fact, the two men recently collaborated on a novel, The Orgy of Souls (you can purchase a copy at right). Their opening remarks lead into a panel discussion on how spirituality influenced each panelist’s writing. The exchange rambled from faith to religion to the Bible and back to writing. Disagreements were frankly expressed but the tone was animated, not exactly heated. As fitting within a family reunion, this was a family disagreement.

    During the meal that followed, some of the most vocal antagonists sat side by side and continued to chat about the issues raised.
    As I sipped absinthe from a Sponge Bob dixie cup at the after party, I reflected upon the hope MoCon had rekindled for me—the hope that folks with radically differing perspectives can work side by side. A refrain for the weekend had been respect, from the respect that partners should give each other whether one is a writer or not—to the self-respect an author should show when marketing one’s writing—to the respect demonstrated in practice among these professionals who happen to disagree about matters of spirituality, yet don’t close off the discussion or cut off the relationship.
    Thanks to Maurice Broaddus, I felt welcomed into this seemingly unlikely conversation about horror writing and spirituality and I look forward to continuing these discussions at the next family reunion.
    For more information about Maurice Broaddus, including his blog and Twitter feed, click on his photo above. His URL is http://mauricebroaddus.com/ Maurice also writes reviews of popular culture for Hollywood Jesus and his most recent novella, Devil’s Marionette, was just released by Shroud Publishing.

James Frederick Leach tends the website dailynightmare.com. (http://dailynightmare.com)

PLEASE TELL US WHAT YOU THINK:

     This is a good time to sign up for our Monday-morning ReadTheSpirit Planner by Emailit’s
free and you can cancel it any time you’d like to do so. The Planner
goes out each week to readers who want more of an “inside track” on
what we’re seeing on the horizon, plus it’s got a popular “holidays”
section.

    Not only do we welcome your notes—but our readers enjoy them as well. You can do this
anytime by clicking on the “Comment” links at the end of each story.
You also can Email ReadTheSpirit Editor David Crumm. We’re also reachable on Twitter, Facebook, Amazon, YouTube and other social-networking sites as well.
    (Originally published at https://readthespirit.com/)

334: Year-End Conversation With an expert on realms of ANGELS!

It’s New Year’s Eve!

    Our annual New Year’s Resolution is just hours away: The 2nd Annual Interfaith Heroes Month, celebrating for 31 days with 31 stories honoring men and women who risked crossing religious boundaries to make peace, help the endangered or strengthen communities in various ways. We’ll also share stories with inclusive and inspirational themes here at ReadTheSpirit though January — as we always do.
    But the Web address we’re hoping you’ll pass along to friends for the 31 heroes is: http://www.InterfaithHeroes.info/

    To get things rolling in this series of creative spiritual connections, we’re proud to publish this Conversation With Dr. Susan Garrett, author of “No Ordinary Angel,” a wonderful new book about the enduring popularity of angels in American culture — and how these angel images in movies, TV shows and novels relate to the faith of the majority of Americans, which is Christianity. There are obvious connections readers can make, as well, with the prominence of angels in other religious traditions. In her book, Susan is exploring the blossoming of popular angel images in American media — and trying to connect the cultural dots for most Americans who look to Christianity as their faith.
    You only have to look at a magazine rack this week! You’ll see the cover of the current Economist magazine below — with an angel on the cover of this hard-nosed news magazine.

    Please Note: We’ve also got both an image of Susan’s book cover below and an easy link to get a copy via Amazon, if you wish. AND, we welcome readers to chime in with your own angel reflections from other faith traditions! Please, send us an email adding your thoughts!

HERE ARE HIGHLIGHTS OF OUR CONVERSATION
    WITH SUSAN GARRETT:


    DAVID: Susan, I enjoyed discovering what was inside the covers of your book. That may sound like a strange comment, but at first glance this looks like a very substantial, scholarly volume. It’s got the impressive logo of the Anchor Yale Bible Reference Library on the cover. You’ve taught at Yale and you’re now professor of New Testament at Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary. And this is, indeed, a book shaped by your scholarship.
    But it’s also simply a good read. It’s a fascinating look at how Americans’ obsessions with angels match up with the faith of the majority of Americans, which is Christianity. I’ll bet that small-group leaders wouldn’t tend to pick up this book in their search for new material for their discussion groups, but I think people will have a lot of fun going through this study. I think you could easily spend six to eight weeks with men and women, sorting out our enduring attraction to angels.
    SUSAN: I hope it will be useful for small groups. I wrote it this way because I’m so interested in popular culture and popular spirituality. To me, what’s really interesting are the connections we can find reaching through many centuries to today.


    DAVID: I need to start by asking you: What’s an angel?
    I asked a couple of dozen high-school students this question and I got answers back ranging from, “They’re kind of like fairies,” to, “They’re messengers from God.” The answers included, “Glorious,” “White and shiny,” “Something with wings.” So, how would you grade those answers, professor?
    SUSAN: The students who answered, “Messengers from God,” get an A. That’s literally what the word means. Of the other attributes mentioned, “Glorious” is most in keeping with biblical portrayals of angels. In the Bible, angels are not often described in terms of their appearance. What we get is people’s reactions and we learn that people are stuck with fear or are in awe. So, I like the answer, “Glorious.”
    DAVID: By the end of your book, readers will have encountered everything from “Touched by an Angel” to “It’s a Wonderful Life,” but I think they’ll be surprised by what you tell them about the long traditions involved in these angel images. In some cases, we’ve wandered pretty far from traditional ideas. You point out in the opening pages of your book that our popular ideas about angels as helpers aren’t necessarily traditional ideas of angels.
    You explain that angels traditionally are much bigger, more glorious, than simply helpers at our elbows. Let me put it another way. Angels are a glimpse of God that mere mortals can survive. I was thinking about your book while I was taking part in a pilgrimage some weeks ago to the island of Iona in the Atlantic Ocean. Our pilgrimage group encountered such fierce Atlantic storms that power went out in that entire region of Scotland and our boat barely made it to take us off the island. This was bitter weather! The rector of Iona Abbey was talking to me about the spiritual lesson of those icy storms. He said that pilgrims like to call Iona a “thin place” because it’s so close to God — but, in fact, being close to God sometimes can be a very uncomfortable experience!


     SUSAN: I think that’s an interesting observation about Iona. There is a fairly consistent testimony throughout the Bible that no one shall see the face of God and live – the divine presence is more than a mere human can take. In Exodus, we read about how this encounter can actually be fatal to human beings. In the biblical tradition, angels are presented as mediators between this overwhelming divine presence and us — as finite and mortal creatures. So, that’s what angels often are doing in the biblical story. Even in modern stories about people encountering angels, often show angels as mediating. They present God to us, but not in a direct way.
    DAVID: People may think they know the Bible’s angel stories, but they’ll find stories in your book that will surprise them. One of my own favorite, lesser-known Bible stories is the one about Balaam, the stubborn little fellow who finally encounters both a talking donkey and an angel to set him right with God.
    I have to quibble with you a little bit here as a lifelong fan of the Balaam story. You write, “The true miracle is not the donkey’s speech but the opening of Balaam’s blind eyes.” Over the past year, ReadTheSpirit has written a whole lot about animals and spirituality — a very important theme these days — and a lot of Bible readers are rediscovering Balaam precisely because this is one of the very few talking-animal stories in the Bible.
    SUSAN: When I say the real miracle here is Balaam’s eyes opening, I’m pointing out the biblical author’s original point. The donkey sees what’s ahead better than Balaam.
    But I do think that there are plenty of places in the Bible that testify to all of creation being given of God and all of creation being valuable to God. And it is only us in our sort of anthropocentric way of looking at the world who somehow prioritize humans so much over the rest of creation. Read the book of Job, where Job encounters God speaking out of the whirlwind and God talks about all of creation as important.

   DAVID: Students passed along questions they want me to ask you. Here are a few about numbers: How many angels are there? What’s the angel “math”? Did one third of them fall into Hell?
    SUSAN: There isn’t any set number of angels. We don’t have any sense of absolute numbers of angels as understood by biblical authors — and ideas about angels changed over the centuries as the Bible was written. The question itself is a pretty complicated question because it’s popularly assumed that angels fell and the Devil was one of those angels and that happened sometime before humans were created — but there’s no account of that in the Bible.
    There is an account in the Bible about some angels coming down and having sex with human women but that’s not really presented as this specific story of a fall of angels. There are references in Revelation. But it was later that people wove these threads together and came up with the more concrete story that people tell today.


    DAVID: This brings up an important point that you explore throughout the book. A lot of what we think we know about angels is really a mixed bag of folklore and popular media.
    You put it this way in your book: “Many have left the self-contained, scientifically predictable world of the late 1960s — a world devoid of supernatural powers — far behind. They have found that the world again teems with angels and other spirit-beings, who are reintroducing elements of magic and surprise into their lives.
    When I asked the high-school students to talk about angels — everybody wanted to talk. So, do you think this popularity of angel lore is helpful or a problem?
    SUSAN: I think both. I think that the sort of openness to spiritual realities that is so pervasive now in our culture presents us with an opportunity. It’s an opportunity for people interested in evangelism. People are very interested today in stories about God acting in the world in various ways – but it’s also a time when clarity and clarification is needed.
    The Internet and other popular media have contributed to confusion. We’ve got a melting pot of ideas from widely different times and places to an extent that was never true before. People can go onto the Internet and read 100 different views about angels, vampires, demons – or whatever else they’re interested in reading about. It’s very difficult for people to sort out all these beliefs.
    The real central argument in my book is my insistence that when people talk about angels, they’re really talking about other things at the same time. The same kind of argument is true if people are interested in telepathy or demons or vampires.
    I want to ask them: Why are you interested? What does this idea do for you? How does it connect to you life? There are deeper anxieties, needs and hopes that are moving people to explore these ideas. It’s those deeper needs we should explore.


    DAVID: Let’s give people another example of what they’ll find insider your book. The students wanted me to ask you about “guardian angels” — and there’s quite an extensive section in your book.
It’s a powerful idea for millions of people, you point out. And it has origins in ancient religious sources, but not really in the Bible. You write that “there is minimal biblical foundation for the belief that each person has a lifelong guardian angel.”
    I like the way you explore this idea. You point out that these guardian angels have played many roles in world culture. People have believed in individual guardian angels and also in national guardian angels. But it’s all a pretty misty and even a confusing sometimes, right?
    SUSAN: Well, first of all, you have to define what you mean by guardian angels. I borrowed one example from “Touched by an Angel” I call this kind of angel the “Search and Rescue Angels.” The idea is that these angels are called in to rescue people from difficult circumstances but they’re not necessarily guardian angels. From historical usage, guardian angels have more of a lifelong association with a particular person. When I say there is minimal biblical foundation for that idea, I’m saying that the Bible doesn’t teach that there’s a particular angel assigned to us.
    There are general references to angels related to people. In Matthew 18:10, Jesus is pointing out the importance of children to God, because “in heaven their angels continually behold the face of my Father in heaven.” Then, in Acts 12, Peter has escaped from prison and he comes to the gate where the people are gathered. The people don’t open the gate at first. A woman runs inside and tells people that Peter is out there at the gate, but others say, “You’re out of your mind! It’s his angel.” An angel who looked just like him. That’s one ancient reading of that passage. There’s another reading of that passage, too, that says they thought he had died and it was his ghost out there.
    We do have other testimony from pretty close to biblical times of belief in guardian angels. It may have been that the biblical authors did believe in them, but it just didn’t emerge in their writing. There’s not really a solid warrant for the belief, but neither can we exclude the possibility that biblical authors believed in guardian angels. In any case, it’s a very ancient belief.


    DAVID: Angels aren’t just protectors, though. There’s also a rich tradition of attractions between angels and humans. You write about the classic movie, “The Bishop’s Wife,” which a lot of people still watch around Christmas time. Cary Grant comes down as an angel to help out a clergyman in a tough parish and in a tough situation in his marriage. While sorting everything out, Cary Grant winds up with an attraction between himself and the bishop’s wife. There’s also a remake of that film more recently, so it’s quite a popular idea.
    SUSAN: Read the story in Genesis 6:1-4. In the ancient world among Jews and then Christians, this was a lot better known as an explanation for the origin of evil in the world than the Garden of Eden story.     This Chapter 6 story tells about heavenly beings coming down and desiring human wives. That story was told and retold in various ways in the early centuries of the Common Era as an explanation of how evil came to be. It was told more than the Eve-and-the-serpent story as the origin of evil.
In some early versions of this story, women give birth to giants and the giants die and evil spirits come out of their bodies. It was told and retold in various ways and was a very important story for early Jews and Christians.
    What’s interesting to me is the great contrast between the angels as bad or sinful or putting themselves before God – and the modern evaluation that an angel’s desire for women is very understandable and it’s something we can learn from. That’s the idea in “The Bishop’s Wife.”
    There are other movies about angels that explore this idea, too. See “Wings of Desire” or “City of Angels” with Nicholas Cage and Meg Ryan. They have this broader look at angels appreciating the tactile world of creation.


    DAVID: So, this brings up another question raised by the students: Can there be a bad angel? This really set off quite a debate among the students. Some say: Yes, there were those angels who fell. They were bad. But, most agreed with a young woman who said: “They’re good. You can’t be a bad angel.”
In you book, you’ve got a whole section about angels of death. As a Baby Boomer, of course, I vividly recall the famous chess match in Ingmar Bergman’s “The Seventh Seal.”
    That’s really interesting reading. I learned a lot reading that section.
    SUSAN: I learned a lot, too. I started out writing a chapter, “The Angel of Death.” Then, as I read the literature I realized that there is more than one angel of death. Angels are associated with death in many forms.
    In popular culture I stumbled on the paradox that “angel of death” connotes two very different things. In “Touched by an Angel,” this kind of angel is very comforting — the divine presence at the moment of death and he leads people to the other side. It’s a very positive thing to encounter that kind of angel of death.
    But we also have images of the Grim Reaper who we don’t want to meet. Two widely different visions of the angel of death — and I’ve discovered that same dichotomy goes all the way back to the first century. In ancient sources you’ve got a figure of personified death who is a grim and horrific and frightening figure in the ancient book, “The Testament of Abraham.” Death is sent by God in that story, but he goes to Abraham in disguise because Abraham is a friend of God. Abraham has lived a rich and fruitful life. It’s only when Abraham refuses to cooperate that Death finally unveils himself.


    DAVID: Speaking of death, one of the last questions raised by the students was: When we die, do we become angels? One adult, sitting in the class, said: “No.”
    But then a student said: “What about the angel Clarence in ‘It’s a Wonderful Life?’”
You talk about this in your book referring both to the Bible and to popular culture. It’s a powerful image — that we can become angels. You mention the popular children’s book that I can remember myself from my own childhood, “The Littlest Angel.” In that book, a little boy dies and becomes a little angel.
    And you basically say — the answer to this question is complicated.
    SUSAN: It’s fairly common for people who know something about the Bible to make the argument this way: Angels are angels and humans are humans; both are creations of God; and they’re different, like different species. Angels stay angels. Humans are exalted in Heaven but they don’t become angels. That’s a very common line of argument.
    But in the ancient understanding, the separation between humans who have gone on to glory and angels is not nearly as clear as that. Read Daniel 12, verse 3: “Those who are wise shall shine like the brightness of the stars …” That’s one of the first references to resurrection. In the ancient Middle East stars and angels were virtually linked, so to say that people will shine like stars is saying they’ll be like angels.
    DAVID: I know that the spiritual idea of an afterlife as we popularly think of it today wasn’t in the ancient Jewish tradition. So, you’re saying that the whole idea of resurrection and angels and afterlife beings evolved over many centuries.
    SUSAN: Ideas about the afterlife were evolving throughout the entire period that the Bible was being written. So you can say the distinctions between humans and angels and the afterlife were fuzzy, overall, in the Bible.


    DAVID: That brings me to another reason that I’m intrigued by your study of angels. It’s got great potential as a point of discussion among people of various faiths. A lot of different cultures have angels or angel-like beings in their traditions. And it’s not a set of beliefs that is so close to the core of Christianity that Christians need to feel defensive in discussing this with others.
    SUSAN: I really think this is an intriguing bridge point and I hope those kinds of discussions do take place.
    Let me tell you where I think the conversation should go. We should be asking the real question about angels, which is: What do these popular stories about angels tell us about our own lives, our own needs, our own assumptions and ultimately our own hopes about how God acts in our world?

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    (Originally published at https://readthespirit.com/)

015: Marcus Borg on It’s a Mystery!

    On Wednesday, we began A Conversation With Marcus Borg about the eternal lessons of the Christmas story, based on his new book with John Dominic Crossan, “The First Christmas.”
    But, beyond Bible scholarship and his efforts to enliven Christians’ reflections on their faith, Borg has another life-long passion: Murder mysteries!
    Over the years, when talking with Borg, I have enjoyed picking up his latest tips on mystery writers he has discovered and I know that other fans have discovered his taste for detectives, as awll. He tells me that, wherever he goes now to lecture and sign books, someone tugs at his sleeve and asks “what else” he is reading.
    So, concluding our Conversation With Marcus Borg …
    DAVID: Before we finish, I do want to ask you about mysteries, because I know that you love detective stories in particular. We’ve talked about this before, the fact that I’ve found a number of religious leaders and scholars who enjoy a good mystery.
    But, last week, we published a Conversation With Frederick Buechner and one part of that conversation we didn’t publish in last week’s excerpts was this: He told me that the books he is enjoying most right now are the detective novels set in Africa by Alexander McCall Smith.
    Let me read to you from the interview transcript what he said:
    “My oldest daughter gave me a boxed set of his paperbacks and I have no way of telling you how much I enjoy them. As soon as I finish one, I rush to the next one, because they’re so engaging and peaceful at the same time. They’re so full of kindness and goodness and depth.”
    And then, Buechner said this: “I think that all of these things I see in these novels I’d like to bring with me as I write this book about Jonah that I’m working on. I want to retell this story, but I want to make this version a quiet, unassuming, engaging kind of book. I’d like people to see the goodness and the depth in the story.”
    MARCUS: Hmm. So, he’s reading in that way. Interesting.
    DAVID: But, here’s the question we’ve talked about before: Why do you think religious people are drawn to murder mysteries?
    MARCUS: A number of people now are aware that I read detective novels and they ask me what I’m reading. They want suggestions, but you’re the only person who keeps asking me about this idea you’re raising. It’s interesting to think about.
    The most obvious connection for scholars and historians is with the detective. I may have even developed this theme in print somewhere, but here is the analogy I would make.
    We might think of detective work as involving three stages: There’s the street detective who simply gathers something that might possibly be evidence, but the street detective doesn’t know what really will be evidence in the final case. It’s a process of collecting data.
    Then there’s the forensic stage, the analysis of the data and the evidence. Sometimes these roles are performed by different people and sometimes they’re performed by the same person.

    The third stage is what I would call the hunching stage, trying to see the big picture that the clues and the evidence that’s been analyzed adds up to – and that is like the process that at least a historian working with ancient material goes through. I don’t know if a historian working with, oh let’s say, the causes of the Vietnam War goes through exactly that same process, but particularly people who work in earlier periods of history where the evidence is particularly thin. We go through these stages.
    But, it’s that hunching stage of the detective process that is most like what we do. There’s that whole relationship between clues and hypotheses that is so central to historical work.
    DAVID: The interest goes deeper than that, doesn’t it?
    MARCUS: Well, there is a second connection. A really good murder mystery or detective novel deals with the human heart, for want of a better phrase, including the heart of the murderer – the killer’s motivations. Oftentimes, we look at the darkness within all of us and the unconscious factors that motivate us.
    We are all living within a mystery, in a sense.
    Now, the difference between detective stories and religion is that in detective stories you typically find out in the end what happened, so the mystery is neatly solved. But that sense of living within a mystery touches something deep inside of us and, in religion, things do not get resolved so easily.
    DAVID: As you were describing the connection in this way, I’m thinking of your interest in the novels of Charles Todd. They involve a returned soldier from World War I who is deeply traumatized. You put my wife, Amy, and I onto reading Charles Todd and the books are terrific.
    What drew you to the series?
    MARCUS: Gosh. There are a number of things in them. I like the specificity of time and lace in his novels. They’re set in England in the immediate aftermath of World War I. My Dad was in World War I and actually was at the front himself. So, I’ve always been fascinated by that war. Then, I lived in England for five years and I love England.
    Then, I like the main character, Inspector Rutherford, and the depth with which Todd creates this character and the psychological aftermath of the war. In most detective stories there’s a sidekick involved. In this one, the sidekick is a dead man, Hamish, who seems to speak inside of Rutherford’s mind. That’s a brilliant idea in itself.
    Hamish is a Scott who Rutherford had to order executed during the war. Hamish refused to lead his men into a battle that he knew was suicidal. He was guilty of insubordination and in order to demonstrate that this couldn’t be tolerated, he is executed under Rutherford’s orders by a firing squad. But now he lives on in Rutherford’s mind and he becomes conscious as a voice. He not only haunts Rutherford but he also helps him solve crimes.

    Anyway, I just love character-driven detective stories, which is why I’m such a fan of Ian Rankin and for that matter Julia Spencer Fleming.
    DAVID: Ian Rankin now is quite famous in this country. Americans love his books. He just had a mystery syndicated week by week in the  New York Times Magazine. But Julia Spencer Fleming isn’t quite so well known.
    Tell us why you enjoy her books.
    MARCUS: Well, her novels are character driven and they’re very good with time and place. It’s like “thick description” to use an academic phrase. Her stories are set in a small town. The main character is an Episcopal priest in her mid to late 30s, but she was an army helicopter pilot for 10 years before going to seminary and becoming a priest, so she’s tough, she’s feminine, she’s smart, she’s spiritual and because the crimes are set n this small town there’s this rich development of the texture of small-town life and all the interrelationships.
    And there is also this overlay in her novels of our lives being lived with God. We hear Claire doing the liturgy. We hear Claire doing her morning devotions sometimes.
    DAVID: My wife and I picked up the whole series on your recommendation and they’re great, too. See why I have so much respect for your tastes in mysteries?
    MARCUS: Well, here’s a new one. George Pelecanos. He’s Ian Rankin’s favorite detective author and they’re about the same age. I heard Ian Rankin speak and he recommended Pelecanos.
    Most of Pelecanos’ books are set in Washington D.C., but this isn’t the Washington D.C. of high politics, or low politics for that matter. It’s the streets of the city that interest him. Heavy on character.
    He has a main character who appears in five or so of his books but then some of his other books are not based on that main character and I’ve read them all now and I like them all. The main character Derek is a black private investigator and I like those best.
    DAVID: Well, there’s another set of books for my shopping list.
    MARCUS: And Martha Grimes. I like her books. They’re a little bit lighter, but I like them. They’re in a British setting and she names novels after pubs and has continuing characters in them.
    One of the funniest things I’ve read in fiction is from one of her books. One of her characters is at a cocktail party and I walking across the room to get a drink and overhears a conversation between t here or four people. The only thing this character overhears is this British gentleman saying: “I’ve never quite seen the point of Finland.”
    It’s this wonderful line that just comes out of nowhere in her book. I enjoy her whimsy. I enjoy her characters.
    DAVID: Those of us who love mysteries tend to buy them by the series, right? So, we get to know the characters as we read book by book.
    MARCUS: (chuckling as he says this) Maybe this is the way an introvert creates community — by reading a series of novels in which the same characters appear!
    You talked to Buechner. You know he describes himself as a flaming introvert and I’m an introvert as well. But you read a series of books like this and, over time, you can say to yourself: Well, at least I know these people!

    And that’s a perfect place to end our Conversation With Marcus Borg. Perhaps you know him a little better after our two-part talk with the Bible scholar.
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