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Dear Rev Know it all;
I have just read the book The
Shack. It was very interesting, but I'm
not sure that it's
very Catholic. Could you please comment.
Yours, Frieda Reid
Dear Frieda
I once heard the eminent Fr. Bob
Barron say that The Shack was like watermelon; very sweet but one had
to spit out the occasional seed. To his perspicacious comments I would like
to add something said by the sagacious Dr Ashleigh Brilliant, “I may not be
perfect, but parts of me are excellent!” I recommend the book to those who
understand that it is a fantasy, and not a work of theology. It is more of a
meditation to be taken with a grain of salt. It is particularly good for
those who suffered some great grief or for those who have trouble with
forgiveness or believing that God loves them. It struck me as I read it,
that it is sort of a Protestant longing for what Catholic visionaries
experience. Some of it sounds like the accounts of the Fatima visionaries.
It describes the intimacy with God that believing Catholics almost take for
granted when we encounter Jesus in the Eucharist and in the tabernacle,
body, blood, soul and divinity,
The Shack is quite a book.
When I first started it, I was alarmed at the mention of a chai latte with
soy milk. That certainly did not bode well, but my fears of new age voodoo
were largely unfounded. What I found was modern American non- denominational
Protestantism lite. To briefly summarize the plot, without giving anything
away, a good man, an unsure Christian has his life and faith shaken when his
very young daughter goes missing on a camping trip. It is clear that she has
been molested and murdered by a serial killer, but her body cannot be found.
"Mac" the
protagonist sinks into a depression for years that he calls the great
sadness. He receives a note saying that God would like to see him in the
shack where his little daughter's
bloody dress was recovered. Desperate, he goes and there he meets God ─
Father, Son and Holy Ghost. His first encounter is with God the Father who
is an ample African-American woman, maternal and warm, one of the most
delightful characters in the book. Jesus is, of all things, a Jewish
carpenter. The Holy Spirit is an Asian woman. I can hear staunchly orthodox
people gritting their teeth. You needn’t. At least not right away. The
author's
point seems to be that God is never quite what we expect, and in this Young
is quite accurate.
First: what's
good about the book? The plot is very compelling. Though you know what's
going to happen, you still want to keep reading. The portrayal of the
Trinity is largely orthodox, with an important exception to which I will
refer later. The book seems fairly orthodox in its discussion of Jesus and
salvation. It is wonderful in the way it discusses the love of God for
creation and humanity. It rhapsodizes about the way God knows. I kept
remembering the Scripture verse, "We
shall know as we are known for we shall see Him as He is." God is very
humanized in the book.
Second what's
not so good about the book? Evangelical leader R. Albert Mohler, Jr. called
The Shack "deeply troubling," saying that it "includes undiluted
heresy" To a Catholic, this is quite a comment. From a Catholic perspective,
evangelical Protestantism is undiluted heresy, but it still makes some
interesting points. William Young, the author, considers himself a great fan
of C.S. Lewis, and The Shack is a fantasy, not unlike C.S. Lewis
allegorical works about God. C.S. Lewis was just inches from Catholicism
himself. Perhaps that is why The Shack gives certain evangelicals the
shpilkus. Mind you, I am a believing Catholic, thus my critique. To
be quite honest the plot drags in spots when Young psychologizes or
theologizes at great length. Sometimes his language is very, well, new age
groovy, but he is, after all, a Canadian who lives in Oregon.
Third: What's
really not so good about The Shack. Being a theological descendant of
Father Martin Luther, that renegade Catholic priest, Young doesn’t realize
that there should be four people in the shack; Father, Son, Holy Ghost and
the Bride (that is the Church.) Jesus mentions the Bride, but she isn’t
really there ─ that’s why he has to portray the Father as a woman who
eventually turns into a man. We Catholics understand that the feminine in
God is wrapped up in Mother Church, personified in our Blessed Mother, Mary.
This blind spot means that Young humanizes God, but doesn’t really
understand the Incarnation. How could he? He is the theological descendant
of Father Martin Luther and Uncle John Calvin. He makes God out to be very
human, but not very incarnate. There is a difference.
In the chapter
"God is a Verb",
the author's
Lutheran inheritance becomes clear. God doesn’t like religion very much and
the 10 commandments exist only to point out the futility of trying to follow
rules. We Catholics think religion is a virtue. Its purpose is to render God
the worship due to Him as the source of all being and the principle of all
government. God owns us, body and soul. This is the reason for religion and
ritual. We are not spirits trapped in flesh. We are incarnate spirits. What
I do with my body, I do with my soul. Jesus doesn’t destroy the law. He
fulfills it. The law is a gift of God’s love, warning us of the dangers of
sin and pointing us to the beauty of virtue. Ritual is the worship that our
embodied spirits offer God. In The Shack God seems to say that there
are no rules or rituals or restraints, just love. There is also no hell, no
fallen angels and no ultimate freedom. One cannot finally choose evil. God’s
love seems irresistible. This is pure Luther. Young seems to believe in
predestination without hell. Everyone is predestined to go to heaven, but
predestined none the less. God will eventually have his way. Wouldn’t that
be nice?
Fourth: What is excellent about
The Shack? Its treatment of God's
universal love and forgiveness is very good. In classic Protestantism and
Islam, God loves some and hates others. It is called predestination. In
Judaism, God’s justice demands punishment for heinous crimes. On the other
hand Catholicism and the New Testament teach that God is universally just,
universally merciful and universally loving. This is the problem is that
The Shack really tackles. Mac comes to believe that God loves him even
though he did not prevent his daughter's
death. He finds assurance that his daughter is in God's
safe keeping, but he cannot cope with God's
love for the perpetrator of this horrific crime. The “!%*# deserves to burn
in hell. I cannot forgive him!” God explains that Mac is His child, Mac's
daughter is His child and the murderer is His child. They are all brethren,
children of the same Father. By my lights, this section of the book is the
most Catholic part of it. It is why Catholicism is so universally hated when
it is fully Catholic. The world wants things to be good or bad, black or
white, up or down. That is why God describes himself as a parent. For a
parent who loves his children nothing is all one thing or the other. While
acknowledging the bad, a father, a real father, still sees the good.
These have been hard times for
Mother Church, the Bride. The world, the flesh and the devil say that there
are some who are beyond her maternal embrace. There are some whom the Father
should not forgive. The Father, the true Father, the Father who is God
punishes in order to heal, not to delight in the pain of the punished. He is
not the sadist Luther believed Him to be. Poor Luther seems to have hated
God. Luther says, “He (God) gorges on us with great eagerness and wrath . .
. he is an avaricious, gluttonous fire.” The children of Luther have never
quite understood the universal love of God because their Father, Martin
Luther never did. He stands solidly with the world saying that a very human,
a very incarnate church should be destroyed. Only the perfect church as
Luther defines it, should be left. And so says all the modern world. They
cannot understand how universal love can be reconciled with justice.
A case in point ─ despite what you
may have heard Pope Pius XII is credited with saving 700,000 Jews from the
Nazi ovens in the Second World War. (If you don't
believe me, read The Myth of Hitler’s Pope by Rabbi David Dahlen,
Special Mission by Dan Kurzman and Triumph, the Power and the Glory
of the Catholic Church by H. W. Crocker III) Shockingly, the Church has
been implicated in the flight of some Nazi criminals from justice after the
war. How can a church which saved Jews then turn around and save Nazis? That
is the wrong question. The real question is how can a God who loved and
chose the Jews allow them to suffer so hideously and then, if He really
loved them, how can He also love the fiends who tortured and killed them?
The idea that God's
love is universal sounds good on paper, but its demands enrage savage,
fallen humanity.
Here's
an example of the problem. The world wants full disclosure. The church offers
the Holy Seal of Confessional. Untold numbers of priests have gone to their
death rather than betray criminals. This is unacceptable to a blood thirsty
world. Criminals should be betrayed, unless of course that criminal is your son
or daughter whom you love. We don't
really want a God who is love, a God who is Father, loving both victim and
perpetrator. We want a God who will take just revenge on those who have hurt us.
That is why God allowed us to brutally kill His own beloved Son and then heard
His son's
prayers that his "Papa," his "Abba" forgive
them.
Sometimes the Catholic Church fails to
punish evildoers in the way that the world believes they should be punished. The
church, or rather the weak and sinful people in whose hands God has placed the
Church, try to imitate their Lord. Sometimes they get it wrong. Most parents get
it wrong, but often they get it wrong for the right reason. The pastors of the
Church are compelled to see the common humanity of victim and perpetrator,
indeed more than that. They see the potential divinization of both!
That is part of the reason why the
Catholic Church opposes the death penalty. The death penalty is not necessarily
forbidden. It must simply be administered with perfect justice. And who is the
perfect, just judge in this sorry world? The death penalty is abhorrent to us
partly because it ends the possibility of repentance, and God does not wish the
death of a sinner, even thought the world demands it. What about all those
people consigned to the flames by the Inquisition etc. etc. When the state has
masqueraded as the Church it has done horrible things wearing clerical
vestments, but when the church has done the right thing and has been truly
Herself, she has always struggled to love the sinner as Christ Himself loves the
sinner. For this, she has been hated more than for any other thing. She holds up
the high moral standard of Christ that Young's
book seems to brush away. She is hated for reminding people of their sins. At
the same time holds out the hope of complete forgiveness, and for this, she is
hated all the more! May she always stand with her Lord at the cross which was
intended for His shame but has become His sign of victory and the very emblem of
God's glory.
Rev. Know-it-all |