By Kevin D. Williamson
Wednesday, December 25, 2024
This man also
took the view that the symbol of Christianity was a symbol of savagery and all
unreason. His history is rather amusing. It is also a perfect allegory of what
happens to rationalists like yourself. He began, of course, by refusing to
allow a crucifix in his house, or round his wife’s neck, or even in a picture.
He said, as you say, that it was an arbitrary and fantastic shape, that it was
a monstrosity, loved because it was paradoxical. Then he began to grow fiercer
and more eccentric; he would batter the crosses by the roadside; for he lived
in a Roman Catholic country. Finally in a height of frenzy he climbed the
steeple of the Parish Church and tore down the cross, waving it in the air, and
uttering wild soliloquies up there under the stars. Then one still summer
evening as he was wending his way homewards, along a lane, the devil of his
madness came upon him with a violence and transfiguration which changes the
world. He was standing smoking, for a moment, in the front of an interminable line
of palings, when his eyes were opened. Not a light shifted, not a leaf stirred,
but he saw as if by a sudden change in the eyesight that this paling was an
army of innumerable crosses linked together over hill and dale. And he whirled
up his heavy stick and went at it as if at an army. Mile after mile along his
homeward path he broke it down and tore it up. For he hated the cross and every
paling is a wall of crosses. When he returned to his house he was a literal
madman. He sat upon a chair and then started up from it for the cross–bars of
the carpentry repeated the intolerable image. He flung himself upon a bed only
to remember that this, too, like all workmanlike things, was constructed on the
accursed plan. He broke his furniture because it was made of crosses. He burnt
his house because it was made of crosses. He was found in the river.
G.K. Chesterton
The Ball and the
Cross, 1909
The inverted cross is the sign of our times—not because
it stands for some kind of serious evil but because it stands for unserious
evil: shallow, sophomoric, self-indulgent, and, above all, derivative.
It has no power—and no content—of its own, only that which it borrows. Its
fundamental character is parasitic. It can be deployed as a simple insult, or
as satire or parody, but never reaches anything higher or more interesting than
that. And the great limitation of satire is that its power dissipates when
knowledge of the thing being satirized fades. The annihilating kind of satire
or parody is a joke on a suicide mission. It cannot live on its own; it
requires a host organism.
And the one it has—our culture—is not in especially good
health.
We may live in a society that thinks of itself as morally
and intellectually post-Christian (though it is no such thing), but
aesthetically we remain fascinated by—practically hostage to—Christianity, its
images and its stories. Popular culture from television
to film
and pop
music to best-selling
novels to fashion
to journalism
to supposedly
high art
from generation to generation seems to do little else but recycle Christian
imagery. Andy
Warhol, a genuinely original genius, was up to his wig in Christian
imagery, but, then, so are banal cabaret artists such as Madonna and Donald
Trump. Political propagandists and power-worshippers
have simply occupied Christian churches, as in
the French Revolution and its Cult of Reason, or built mock “cathedrals” to
their causes, or appointed themselves the heads of their churches, as Henry
VIII did and Charles III has, carrying on the tradition.
When GQ wanted to depict
Muhammad Ali as a martyr, the art director did not borrow an image of Yasir
ibn Amir—he made the great boxer into St. Sebastian. Dan Brown didn’t make his
private-jet money typing illiterate imbecility about imagery associated with
Marxism or feminism or Unitarian Universalism or Jungian psychoanalysis. If you
want to make that Godfather money, that Exorcist money, that Star
Wars money, you dip into the well of Christianity. And maybe you don’t
think too hard about why that well seems to be bottomless. You can keep cashing
the checks without ever having to figure that out.
That is not a matter of religious belief or of religious
self-identification—it is a matter of civilization. At a critical moment
in the Harry Potter books, the hero visits the grave of his parents, upon which
is engraved a line from 1 Corinthians: “The last enemy that shall be destroyed
is death.” Which is natural, as J.K. Rowling explained:
“They’re very British books.” It is not a matter of mere happenstance that
“very British” goes along with the New Testament rather than with Confucius or
the Bhagavad-Gita or the Koran. “Very American” remains a close cousin of “very
British,” of course, and so GQ went with St. Sebastian and not with a
great Islamic martyr—no one in its intended audience would have understood the
latter reference.
And, speaking of GQ, none of this
Christendom-mining even requires basic religious literacy: Writing in that
esteemed fashion magazine about the Star Wars prequels, Joshua Rivera describes
the virgin birth of Anakin Skywalker as an “immaculate conception,” a
phrase referring to a Catholic doctrine that has nothing
at all to do with the virgin birth of Jesus. It may never have been quite
true that the Golden Age of Hollywood was a case of “a Jewish-owned business
selling Catholic theology to Protestant America” (the original source of the
witticism is disputed), but it surely is the case that today a very large chunk
of our pop-culture industry comprises religiously illiterate,
ask-me-about-my-pronouns secular-minded types whose senses are arrested by
religious habits, the saints and martyrs, the Eucharist, visions of Heaven and
(especially!) Hell, monasteries, stained-glass windows, Latin phrases engraved
in stone, celibacy, angels, crucifixions, etc.
In a similar way, I do not credit the idea that these
angry Christopher (Who-topher?) Hitchens types are in any genuine sense
atheists. A genuine atheist should be either indifferent or maybe a touch
regretful. Our so-called atheists are more like the maniac in The Ball and
the Cross—they cannot stop thinking about Christianity and see Christian
influence everywhere, especially where it isn’t. (It will be amusing once they
figure out that about half of the prominent placenames in these United States
are explicitly Christian in origin, from Providence, Rhode Island, to San
Francisco, California.) No, these so-called atheists are not non-believers—they
believe, hard.
There is a reason they insist on replacing “A.D.” with
“BCE,” as though that would somehow change the fact that we number our very
years from the life of Christ. That isn’t disbelief: That is fanatical belief.
For a point of comparison: I myself do not believe in astrology, and I think it
is profoundly silly and just a little irritating that the Washington Post
publishes columns by people who want to lecture me about “believing in science”
while also publishing horoscopes, but the day I start a committee for the
purpose of suppressing the publication of horoscopes, you’ll know that I have
finally cracked. I do not believe in astrology and, discerning no power in it,
do not obsess about it.
The pagan world, which still has a little juice in it,
lives on in the background, and sometimes in the foreground: Washington, D.C.,
with its Augustan
monuments to imperial power, is a much more thoroughly pagan city than Rome
could ever hope to be. (If you want to see real atheists, you can find them in
Rome, packed into the churches to gawk at the Caravaggios.) For years,
Christian worship services were held in the U.S. Capitol, the dome of which is
decorated on its interior with a
painting of George Washington depicted as Jupiter and surrounded by
Greco-Roman deities and deified American heroes. The American founders thought
of themselves as the new Israelites, and, somewhere, Ramesses the Great is
smiling as their descendants go about their political business in the shadow of
the giant obelisk they built to commemorate the leader of their exodus. The
pagan world retains some cultural
cachet. We’re still making gladiator movies, and there is a reason for that
beyond traditional
homoeroticism. There is some aesthetic power left in the Greco-Roman
tradition.
But there is much greater power in Christianity, and so
we’ll spend at least part of this month fighting about the display of manger
scenes in public spaces, or lamenting the vandalization
of these scenes, or writing
batty articles about why we should say “Happy Holidays” instead of “Merry
Christmas.” And feelings get tender around these issues because of an
uncomfortable reality that makes some good and decent people feel excluded: Of
course this is a Christian nation, whatever Thomas Jefferson put in his
letters.
It is a Christian country not because we have a Christian
state (we do not have one, do not require one, and should not desire
one), but because it is the product of a Christian society and a Christian
civilization. None of those ever stopped being what it is simply because a lot
of very influential people stopped believing in the religion itself while most
everybody else continued doing what Christians have done for most of their
history, i.e., affirming their belief in the nice and encouraging parts of the
gospel while continuing to live like pagans. (And not even Dante’s “virtuous
pagans”—far from it!) No, the Christian imprint on our society doesn’t come
from polling data about what the average American believes in the waning days
of Anno Domini 2024, much less from the average American’s behavior. Nor does
it come from what the Bill of Rights says or from what Ruth Bader Ginsburg said
it says.
Tradition, G.K. Chesterton wrote, is “the democracy of
the dead. Tradition refuses to submit to the small and arrogant oligarchy of
those who merely happen to be walking about.” Americans are uncomfortable with
what that implies. The god of the American civic religion is something called
“Fairness,” and Fairness requires that everybody be allowed to inhabit a world
handcrafted ex nihilo to his specifications, a paradise in which no one
is made to encounter or accommodate anything that is not of his own choosing or
his own doing. The theologians’ project called “theodicy” consists of coming up
with clever ways to pretend that Fairness and the God of floods and Egyptian
plagues and Abraham and Isaac and all that blood and violence are basically the
Same Guy.
No one hates hereditary facts—and Tradition—as intensely
as the adolescent, and it is useful to understand that it was American popular
culture that invented the idea of the “teenager” and then concluded that the
best thing in life was to be one of those and to keep being one forever. The
teenage mind may want to turn the cross upside down in protest, or to vandalize
it, or to repurpose it, or insist that those who take shelter under it take up
this or that position about gay rights or war or abortion or progressive
income-tax rates. The derivative mentality can do anything with the cross
except ignore it.
At one time, one might have made a persuasive argument
that this was at least in part a defensive measure, because people who claimed
to speak on behalf of the church or of the Christian tradition had a lot of
power and wanted to use it to interfere in the lives of people who saw the
world differently. But that has not been true for a long while—the era of Jerry
Falwell and his ilk has been over for some time. The modern equivalents of
figures such as Falwell are churchmen such as Robert
Jeffress, who have shown themselves much more willing to bend themselves
and their churches to the demands of political power than to try to do the
opposite. That old explanation will not do. Things have changed.
Some people find it impossible to adjust to that new
reality, which is how you get
Slate reporting that the Federalist Society’s Leonard Leo is an
arch-Catholic billionaire political kingmaker when in fact he is a
non-billionaire lawyer and nonprofit administrator whose organization’s coffers
were topped up with a
$1.6 billion donation from Chicago businessman Barre Seid, whose background
is Jewish. (Wrong conspiracy theory, guys!) The maniac in The Ball and the
Cross ends up attacking roadside fences and his own furniture because there
are crosses in the woodwork—our version of that is fretting
about how Opus Dei secretly runs the FBI.
Tradition—but just a tradition? Because anything
might become part of a tradition, as the persistence of pagan religious
elements (Easter eggs, Christmas trees) in Christian cultures reminds us.
Flannery O’Connor famously
said of the Eucharist: “If it’s just a symbol, to hell with it,” and,
if I thought that tradition were all there really is to Christianity—if I were
one of those “cultural
Christians” I’ve heard tell of, Elon Musk and the rest—then I might be
tempted to say to hell with that, too. There is enough getting in the way of
life’s little pleasures—you know: hatred, selfishness, the stuff that really
feels good—without some dusty old Levantine wine cult’s getting in the way just
because it (like Jonah Goldberg’s Animal
House references) has a “long tradition of existence to its members and
to the community at large.”
***
I’ve never made much effort to convince anybody of the truth
of Christianity. There have been many, many words written to that effect, and a
lot of them have been pretty dumb and, for that reason, probably have done more
harm than good. The
Case for Christ, for example, is a book so supernaturally dumb, so
transparently dishonest in its account of the evidence, that one half suspects
that it was infernally inspired to discredit more intelligent Christian
apologists.
I have a few friends who are very into biblical
archaeology and things like that, believing (or maybe only half-suspecting)
that one of these days somebody is going to find an indisputable fragment of
the True Cross or Noah’s ark or the manger in Bethlehem or something like that,
and that all of the skeptics will, in that way, be put to shame. As it stands,
we have very little contemporary documentary evidence outside of the gospels
themselves that such a person as Jesus ever existed, much less that any of the
stories that Christians tell regarding that episode are true. Just under half
(or, depending on your tabulation, just more than half) of the books of the New
Testament (amounting to about a quarter of the words) were written by Paul, who
never claimed to have even met Jesus in the flesh during the ministry described
in the gospels. If you put that very light stuff on one side of the scale and
then load up the other side with the sheer unlikeliness of it all, the
inconsistencies in biblical accounts of Jesus’s life and work, the apparent
indifference (or at least reticence) of God in the intervening millennia—you
are not going to make a lawyer’s case for Christ, or, at least, not a very good
one. Nor will you make a good archeologist’s case or an astronomer’s case or an
evolutionary biologist’s case.
And, if you try, you will be reduced to intellectual
dishonesty, debater’s tricks, vulgarity, and nonsense. That isn’t how to go
about it.
But, what to do, then?
I’ve often thought that one of the reasons Christian
institutions and thinkers (like those belonging to many other religions) put so
much work into creating beautiful things—churches, art, literature, drama,
music, etc.—is because the aesthetic sensibility is adjacent to the religious
one. Which is not to say that we should embrace Christianity because we admire
Notre Dame or the Mass in B minor or Moby-Dick any more than we should
embrace Islam because we admire the Shah Jahan Mosque or the music of Nusrat
Fateh Ali Khan or the poetry of Al-Mutanabbi. (Or Judaism because we admire,
what, half of the greatest American contributions to literature?)
Without reducing it to a question of metaphysical utilitarianism, you don’t do
push-ups to get good at doing push-ups—you do push-ups to get stronger. Art and
literature and architecture aren’t there to be propaganda for Christianity, but
there is a relationship there.
You don’t come to believe that Christianity is true the
same way you come to believe that Smith has the better argument in the case of Smith
v. Jones or in the way you come to believe that Apple shares are
underpriced. It is more like—but not the same as—the way you come to
believe that this painting or building is beautiful, that this man is
admirable, that a certain friendship is suddenly very valuable to you, that you
are in love.
And it is here that the strangeness of
Christianity comes into play.
***
The Magi—the wise men from the east, the “three kings” in
the popular tradition—aren’t there at the manger in Bethlehem. That is a
conflation of different biblical events. They follow the star and arrive
sometimes “after Jesus was born in Bethlehem of Judea,” entering “the house” to
see “the Child with Mary His mother.”
When I think about biblical stories, I sometimes have to
remind myself—and try to emphasize in my writing—that we are expected to
believe that these are stories about real people, who, when they are not
appearing as characters in Scripture, have the usual problems real people have:
work, family, health, demands on their time, demands on their attention,
demands on their financial resources, etc. Another way of saying that is that
for every wise man who came journeying from the east, there probably was a wife
or a boss or a brother-in-law back home who suspected that he was not so wise,
after all, that he was off on some damned fool’s errand with his wise-guy
friends, taking a long and no doubt expensive trip to some faraway land
in order to observe—and financially support—events of no obvious immediate
consequence to him or his family or his people or his community. You’re
going where? To do what? Because you saw … a star? A star at night, in the
night sky, you’re saying? In the place where you usually see stars? And you’re
taking how much gold? And you’re leaving me here, alone, to do all the work and
take care of the kids by myself?
The Magi make their journey, and what they first find is
not Jesus but Herod—powerful and scheming, mean, fearful, meddling, full of
jealousy and malice. He questions them and then obtains from them a promise of
collaboration with his regime. The Magi move on. They press forward through the
darkness, led in a way that is vague and mysterious but compelling, negotiate
some difficulty with the secular powers, and then, after all of that complexity
and complication, they encounter—what?
A child, Jesus. Not Jesus as a child—the Magi
cannot see forward or backward along the timeline; what they know is what they
have in front of them—simply, a child. The child has no particular urgent use
for the gifts the Magi present, each of which corresponds to one of the child’s
attributes: gold, for the king; incense, for the priest; myrrh, for the corpse
of the sacrificial victim. Perhaps the symbolic value of these gifts was not
immediately obvious to the Magi: These were expensive commodities and fitting
royal gifts if only for that reason. What they could not have seen, except
perhaps through the gift of divine insight, was that the gifts not only said
something about Christ but also about their relationship to Christ as men: a
king, a priest, and a sacrificial victim are those things only in relation to
other men (subjects, worshipers, and those who are to be sacrificially
redeemed) and on their behalf.
In that sense, the journey of the Magi presages the
Christian journey itself. It begins with a persistent, urgent call, one that
any entirely rational person—including the one being called—might reasonably
suspect is a matter of fanciful misinterpretation and seek out a second opinion
or a more moderate course of action. One then sets out into the
darkness rather than out of it, into the night, with its mysteries, rather than
into the cold light of day, when one might think better of these strange
feelings. One encounters Herod, who is but one of many forms of the same
adversary. One draws near to Christ and then encounters Him all at once, in the
most (seemingly) simple of forms. One possibly glosses over the significance of
the fact that He already was there, waiting for us. One gives such gifts as one
has been able to carry so far in the night and its darkness, only to realize
that He has no need of any such gifts, and that, in giving them, we come to
understand what it is that we need.
It is not that doctrine and dogma are not important—it is
that they come later and are subordinate. They do not lead us to the experience
of Christ but only help us to understand it and to integrate it into our
lives.
And, then, the hard part: “They left for their own
country by another path.”
They traveled together, surely, at least for some of the
trip, but each of them was now also traveling alone, having laid down the gold
and the frankincense and the myrrh and taken up the much heavier burden of the
truth, which is also the burden of the Cross but not only the burden of the
Cross. And what was that star, after all?
Across
my foundering deck shone
A beacon, an eternal beam.
Flesh fade, and mortal trash
Fall to the residuary worm;
World’s wildfire, leave but
ash:
In a flash, at a trumpet
crash,
I am all at once what Christ is,
Since he was what I am, and
This Jack, joke, poor
potsherd,
Patch, matchwood, immortal
diamond,
Is immortal diamond.
Immortal is a very nice word—the sound of it, the
thought of it.
But that word, by its nature, points to the future. At
least it does for us—for now. What falls to us in the present moment is to do
what the Magi had to do after the remarkable encounter: find our way to our own
home by another path, without anything so obvious as a new star blazing in the
heavens to show us the way. We do not know the way. The night is dark and the
roads are unfamiliar, and home is very far away. What we want is a sign—what we
have is memory.
We remember what we saw that night, and we have the
stories, which is how we remember together, how we remember in community. But
we do not remember these things because we wish to embark on a program of
self-improvement or a program of community-improvement, not because we care
about “the culture” or because we believe that religious observance will lead
to stronger families and healthier communities and a more glorious republic. As
worthy and good as any of those things may be, what are they next to that scene
in Bethlehem?
Outside, it is dark and cold. Inside, there is the
firelight and the scene of love and life and warmth, the mother and father and
child.
And then there’s us. The ones who have waited outside the
longest are the most used to the cold and the dark, but we know where we want
to be. Before we were the Magi, we were the shepherds, also called, also
uncomprehending. What do we know? That if the manger is empty, then the tomb
isn’t. We stop short, almost there, standing at the periphery of the scene,
gripped by some kind of compulsion if not yet by belief, starting to figure out
that the edge of the light and the edge of the darkness are, after all, the
same place. And that is the place where we live and always have lived, and must
live, for now.
“They left for their own country by another path.”
If that scene in Bethlehem is just a story, a pretext for
moral instruction and a long weekend and time with friends and family and vague
good feelings about generosity and kindness, then it would be better to forget
about it altogether. You cannot build anything good on a foundation of lies,
which is another word for nice old stories fortified with cheap sentimentality.
You cannot make the trip to Bethlehem and then return to the east, reporting to
your exasperated friends and family, “Well, it wasn’t really much of anything,
but it’s going to inspire some very beautiful buildings in a thousand years,
and some very good poetry, and some first-rate paintings. And the stories will
make people feel like they should be nicer to one another, at least for a few
weeks in winter toward the end of the year.”
Anno Domini: Either we number the years of our lives from the events at Bethlehem for a good reason or we don’t, and, if we don’t, we should knock it off. One way or another, we eventually will come to the end of our journey, and we will find exactly what the Magi were destined to find from the moment they first set their eyes on that star: Christ or nothing.
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