Why Christians
Should Read Fiction
By Russell D.
Moore
Is reading
fiction a waste of time?
I’ve found that
most people who tell me that fiction is a waste of time are folks who seem to
hold to a kind of sola cerebra vision of the Christian life that just
doesn’t square with the Bible. The Bible doesn’t simply address man as a
cognitive process but as a complex image-bearer who recognizes truth not only
through categorizing syllogisms but through imagination, beauty, wonder, awe.
Fiction helps to shape and hone what Russell Kirk called the moral imagination.
My friend David
Mills, now executive editor at First Things, wrote a brilliant article
in Touchstone several years ago about the role of stories in shaping the
moral imagination of children. As he pointed out, moral instruction is not
simply about knowing factually what’s right and wrong (though that’s part of
it); it’s about learning to feel affection toward certain virtues and revulsion
toward others. A child learns to sympathize with the heroism of Jack the Giant
Killer, to be repelled by the cruelty of Cinderella’s sisters and so on.
When you think
about it, that’s how the Scriptures often work. The Proverbs, for instance,
paint a vivid picture of the revolting tragedy of adultery (Proverbs 7). Jesus
doesn’t simply speak about God’s forgiveness in the abstract. He tells a story,
the prodigal son, designed to shock (a son who would spurn his inheritance) and
to elicit sympathy and identification. The apostles do the same thing. They
employ literary, visual language meant to appeal not just to the intellect but
to the conscience through the imagination. Think of the Apostle Paul’s language
of “laboring until Christ is formed in you,” or his use of literary themes in
the OT (“fruit of the Spirit,” and so on).
Fiction can
sometimes, like Nathan the prophet’s story of the ewe lamb, awaken parts of us
that we have calloused over, due to ignorance or laziness or inattention or
sin. One night, in the car on my way home, I was talking by telephone to my
eighty-six year-old grandmother. She was telling me a story about the last time
she saw my grandfather alive. She told me about feeling the coldness of his
feet as she changed his socks in his hospital bed, about how his eyes were
focused on her, though he couldn’t speak. She talked about how, when the nurses
told her she had to leave, she kissed him, told him she loved him, and that she
could feel him watching her as she left the room, for the last time. I knew she
had lost my grandfather. I know that people die. I know “Husbands love your
wives” (Ephesians 5).
But that story
awakened something in me. It prompted me to hold my wife with a special
tenderness when I walked in the door. I had imagined what it would be like to
say goodbye to her in that way, and, suddenly, all the daily pressures of kids
and bills and house repairs and travel just seemed to fit in a bigger context.
Fiction often does the same thing. When I read Tolstoy’s Death of Ivan Illych, I gain an imaginative sympathy with something
I might avoid in the busyness of life: what it’s actually like to die. When I
read Wendell Berry’s stories of Henry County, Kentucky, I can gain insight on
what it would be like to face losing a family farm in the Great Depression.
This fiction gives a richer, bigger vision of human life.
What’s more is
that fiction is, I think, very helpful for those who are called to preach and
teach (which, at least in terms of bearing witness to Christ is true of all of
us). Fiction helps the Christian to learn to speak in ways that can navigate
between the boring abstract and the irrelevant mundane. It also enables you to
learn insights about human nature. I’ve never had a problem with drug
addiction. I can’t imagine why on earth anyone would take meth. Reading stories
of life in Eastern Kentucky and about the motivations behind a meth addict can
teach me to address those things biblically, and to see where I have similar
idolatry that would be just as incomprehensible to someone else.
I would say that
fiction, along with songwriting and personal counseling, are the most constant
ways that God teaches me empathy. It’s easy in evangelical Christianity to
assume that everyone who opposes us or disagrees with us is simply to be
verbally evaporated as an enemy to be destroyed. But no false teaching and no
wrong direction has any power unless it appears to someone to be good. Jesus
teaches us that those who hand over the disciples to be killed will “think
themselves to be doing the will of God.” Almost everyone is the hero in his or
her own personal narrative.
People don’t
think of themselves the way super-villains do in some old cartoon, rubbing
their hands together and plotting “the reign of eeeee-vil in the world. Ha ha
ha ha!” Fiction helps people honestly present those internal stories that
people tell themselves, things they won’t disclose in, say, a debate or a
non-fiction monograph arguing for their way of life. In fiction, a Darwinist
can show you what it’s like to be scared that you’re living a meaningless life
in a meaningless universe, but he can also show you where he finds those
things, like awe and love, that he can only ultimately find in God.
But, finally,
good fiction isn’t a “waste of time” for the same reason good music and good
art aren’t wastes of time. They are rooted in an endlessly creative God who has
chosen to be imaged by human beings who create. Culture isn’t irrelevant. It’s
part of what God commanded us to do in the beginning, and that he declares to
be good. When you enjoy truth and beauty, when you are blessed by gifts God has
given to a human being, you are enjoying a universe that, though fallen, God
delights in as “very good.”
http://www.russellmoore.com/2013/03/25/why-christians-should-read-fiction/
This is so VERY good! Thank you for sharing this- could I share it as well?
ReplyDeleteAlso, I would be very grateful if you could share with me how you out your photo header there!
Love you!
Kat
You are more than welcome to share this, Kathryn! It was originally shared with me and I'm glad you like it.
ReplyDeleteDon't you love my picture at the top?! When I discovered it the other day, it really resonated with me. The title is "Forgotten Tunes" and it makes me think of hymnody of old - beautiful hymns that are so rarely sung today.
As for inserting a picture, click on "design" at the top, then select "layout" from the left column, then "edit" on the box where the heading is. From there you can insert a picture.