Sunday, May 31, 2009

Angel of Wrath 2: Problems


Unfortunately, the problems in Bill Myers' Angel of Wrath are legion.

Wallowing. I've found that there is a feel to most thrillers that's troubling, and this story follows that trend. It's as though the writer revels in the violence, fear, and death, and that's just wrong. The focus here seemed thoroughly negative. No doubt there's some kind of amazing epiphany later, but I don't think it's possible to go negative for two-thirds of the story and suddenly reverse the effect on the reader in probably well under one-third.

Holier Than They. Also, there's a kind of sanctimony involved here, and it's a bit misplaced at times. For example, there's an undercurrent of glee in the sinful churchgoers getting theirs. Now, most of the victims have some kind of moral or ethical problem--put more bluntly, they are sinning in some fashion explicitly condemned in Scripture. (Some might argue about the abortionist, but I think even many "pro-choice" people will admit that there's an understandable problem.) But there is an odd man out--supposedly a false teacher. While I am not an evolutionist, I don't see that an evolutionist would necessarily be a false teacher from a Biblical standpoint. His teaching is in a secular context (as a high-school teacher), not in the context of teaching Scripture or doctrine. The remarks about evolutionary racism are also ill-considered. While some racists have justified their views through evolution, some have used the Bible for the same purpose. Christians shouldn't engage in strawman tactics.

Evil Christians! I can understand wanting to avoid an unnecessarily rosy portrayal of Christians, but here Christians actually seem more evil than others. The pastor is more concerned with image than with God. His father (also a pastor once) sexually abused his own daughter. Then there are the aforementioned Sinners In The Hands Of An Angry Psycho. I guess it wouldn't bother me so much if there were a counter-balance--an opposing view that would relieve the bleakness. The closest thing is the Praise-and-Worship geek, and since she's an unbiblical pop-theology construct, that's no great comfort.

Fairness Doctrine. The author gives more time to some bad theology than I'm comfortable with. There's a bit more detail on Black Mass than is necessary--I know kids can find out that sort of thing on Wikipedia, but we shouldn't do the lookups for them. A fair amount of the bad stuff is imitable, and the Coolness Factor of reproducing some of it will far outweigh the clearly fictional consequences.

We Don't Need God; We Have Physics! There's a strong tendency these days to rationalize God into some really quirky quantum phenomenon--another troubling trend this story follows. Apparently in the previous episode, a machine--a non-spiritual object--enabled people to access the Voice of God. Jazmin, a quasi-prodigy, becomes God-conscious as a result, and that enables her to pick out the Praise Geek as the Only One Who Gets What's Happening.

One of the things that bothered me was the whole business of bringing in string theory and vibrations, as though string theory is going to reduce God to a formula or phenomenon. Also, the use of the Fall of Jericho and Jehoshaphat's victory over the invading armies is inaccurate. What brought the walls down in the first case was obedience to God's command, and the fighting that followed was apparently normal. The idea that sound was involved is a back-reading of modern faith in physics. That leaves us with Jehoshaphat, where again obedience was probably the key, yet even so it's anomalous: the exception, not the rule. Normally, God expected the warriors to do their job, not stand around while the praise band did its thing.

We Don't Need No Steenkin' Prayer! While I haven't finished the story, I strongly suspect that the demon is routed by by an Amazing Praise and Worship Extravaganza. This is nonsense. Contrary to what many believe, such things don't really bother Satan. Think about it: presumably the continuous chorus of praise in Revelation has been there for some time, yet Satan still came before God in Job without apparent trouble. On a personal level, some of the worst Satanic activity I've encountered occurred in a worship setting.

This calls for a quote or two:

Cindy the Praise Geek: "What would you think if I contacted a few of the choir members and we got together?"
"For prayer?" [the pastor] asked.
"No, uh--"
"For singing," Jaz interrupted.
[small cut]
"I could call them up," [Cindy] said. "The ones who wanted could meet us over at the church."
"To sing," [the pastor] repeated.
"To...worship, yes. And we could pray, too." (pp. 198-199, ellipses in original)

Prayer is apparently an afterthought here.

The Envelope, Please. Okay, I just checked the ending. Singing, not prayer, is the big deal. Maybe Jesus should've said, "This kind doesn't go out except by Praise and Worship." Reality check: the song in question is used by various non-Christian groups. It has no inherent power to drive out demons, and as mentioned above, praise and worship have no noticeable effect on Satan. Oh, and familial love (with repentance, yes) turns out to be strong enough to clock a demon. (And it is familial love: it is stated in precisely those terms on p. 288.) But only God's love could succeed there; human love of any kind is too weak.

Conclusion. So this winds up being a pop-theology fantasy of a dangerous kind: it encourages false views that could harm those who believe them. And the attitude issues don't help. If you don't like thinking through implications and don't care about theology, you'll probably like the book. Otherwise, skip it.

2 comments:

David said...

Without reading the entire book you have no context to make the statements you make. About the only thing I agree with is that he gives too much info about satanic worship.

While praise is the first notable weapon, Myers later brings out the fact that without prayer even that is useless, making prayer the supreme weapon, not the afterthought. He balances the hypocritical pastor with the former FBI sister. There are plenty of counterbalances in this story to give it the proper balance.

Yes, you are going to meet up with demonic warfare during praise and worship services primarily because that is where the battle is going on, not because the people are doing so "pop theological worship" thingy. Had he directed this work towards the "laughing revival" in the 90s I would have to agree with you. As it is Myers is pointing to the different things that cause spiritual weakness within the Body of Christ. And by the way, Lisa finds her way through the whole mess by forgiving her father at the end, to the point of explaining that she heard him weeping night after night before God to be delivered. This is something that many Christians face. They have let something into their lives and don't know how to get rid of it. Too much of them wants to hold on to it, even though they despise themselves for it. This is realistic, not contrived.

Steve said...

In order of appearance...

1. "Without reading the entire book you have no context to make the statements you make."

Rubbish. Given the fact that people never process everything they hear or read, it is certain that you didn't read "the entire book" either, and thus by your own argument have no context to make comments.

However, I do know about context--as a student of Linguistics, and as a translator and editor, it's an important topic for me--and I certainly do have enough context to arrive at a conclusion.

2. "While praise is the first notable weapon, Myers later brings out the fact that without prayer even that is useless, making prayer the supreme weapon, not the afterthought."

A page number would be useful here. I did read the ending, and there was little reference to prayer. (Incidentally, I read probably about 75-80% of the book; I'm not extrapolating from two or three chapters.)

3. "He balances the hypocritical pastor with the former FBI sister. There are plenty of counterbalances in this story to give it the proper balance."

In my usage, "one" seldom constitutes "plenty."

I could almost see the sister as a counterbalance, except

a) she is a former Christian who fell away as a result of massive and ongoing hypocrisy from her Christian family, which itself mitigates her choices and behavior; and

b) her brother is merely a stereotype (and an inaccurate and offensive one at that), NOT a real person, so the balance is chimerical by definition.

On (b), I should've mentioned how shallow and evil was the megachurch stereotype which its cardboard-cutout pastor reflects. There are certainly megachurches that focus more on image than on Christ. There are small churches (and individuals) that do the same thing. Here again, "holier than they" crops up: they aren't like the author, so they are horribly evil.

3. "Yes, you are going to meet up with demonic warfare during praise and worship services primarily because that is where the battle is going on, not because the people are doing so "pop theological worship" thingy."

It's my experience and observation that praise and worship are at most concomitants of spiritual warfare, not the warfare itself. (From the standpoint of Heaven, they may indeed merge. For us, they don't.) In any case, I triple-dog dare you to provide a case in the Bible where a demon or demonic entity is routed by praise and worship. By prayer, yes; by an authoritative command based on submission to God, certainly. But praise and worship at best signal that submission; they are not themselves submission, though they should be.

4. "And by the way, Lisa finds her way through the whole mess by forgiving her father at the end..."

Noted. And of course part of the problem also is that she has a Deep, Dark Secret of her own that caps her rebellious promiscuity. That aspect does work well, and I shall insert a reference to it in the Good Points section. I'm not saying that the story is devoid of positives but that they are overwhelmed by the negatives.

 
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