Posted on 12/01/2004 1:18:57 PM PST by Caleb1411
Recently a friend drew my attention to an exchange of letters between a mid-twentieth-century novelist and a lady. The lady thought the novelist was naughty and proceeded to lecture him about the unseemly content of his books. The novelistand we can imagine bright, eager eyes over a mischievous grinreplied by thanking the woman profusely for rescuing him from error, and concluded by begging her to send a photo so he could see what true Christian charity looked like. A very satisfying put-down, in my friends opinion.
It got me thinking, though. For one thing, this wasnt a fair fight. Your average moralizing citizen is no match for a guy who writes comic novels for a living. If the playing field were to be level, he should have voluntarily adopted some kind of handicap, for example, removing the letter E from his typewriter. (Someone made a similar observation when Antioch College instituted its student rule that all sexual encounters must be conducted with permission explicitly requested and conferred at every stage. For the first time in romance history, the verbal nerds had an advantage over the lummoxy jocks.)
But I was also concerned by the authors clear enjoyment of putting the lady down so adeptly, the same enjoyment my friend and many others felt in reading the story. I dont think we should get so much pleasure out of causing each other pain. When Jesus tells us not even to say You fool! to another, when he links malicious anger to the spirit of murder, we glimpse the darker side of this pleasure. It is deliciously gratifying to see idiots roundly put down, but that sense of gratification is not really one of our better points.
And maybe idiots deserve more mercy than that, since that company includes all of us sooner or later. I think of this whenever I hear a Christian smugly say that he or she does not suffer fools gladly. Well, I think, Jesus suffers you.
Biddies & Baptists
I ventured these hesitations about the author-biddy exchange, probably sounding like a moralistic biddy myself, and my friends challenged me right back. What about You brood of vipers? What about whitewashed sepulchers? Dont Jesus and the Baptist give us clear examples of speaking out in chastening anger, without minced words?
I had to think about this. What I concluded was that it was the biddy, not the author, who was John the Baptist. She saw what she thought was gross immorality propounded in the authors works, and took it on herself to challenge him directly. He, in contrast, had no desire to improve her taste in literature, but only to enjoy insulting her.
Maybe she was a literary philistine, maybe she was a priss, but the outline of her action is surely permissible. The biblical examples show that we may rebuke another person, in gentle or stinging words as the persons intransigence requires, as long as our goal is his souls health. In fact, the example we have in Matthew 18 is of giving an initial rebuke in private, so that the person has a chance to consider it without the added thrill of public humiliation. The lady wrote the author privately and stated her concerns; she is not the one who released the entire exchange to the public.
Were unlikely to write such a letter today, even to an author we think is egregious in his literary perversity. We see the obvious futility of rebuking someone who has overstepped moral boundaries, and we know that any attempt to do so would only fill our target with glee and allow him to posture as a misunderstood, even oppressed, rebel. But rebuking, in itself, never goes out of style. Its just that, instead of panderer!, people are more likely to yell homophobe! or racist! Theres nothing wrong with a well-placed rebuke. The guidelines, it seems, are that it be directed toward the individuals soul-health, and that it be initially attempted directly and in private.
The lady, right or wrong, intended her message to lead the author to insights that would improve his life. The author, however, did not appear to have any such positive intentions for the lady. He was just having fun parading his literary gifts at her expense. And my friends ask, Whats wrong with that? Cant we have fun? Wouldnt ruling out this kind of response mean giving up humor writing and satire?
But humor doesnt have to hurt. You can poke fun at people, even satirize and parody them, without adding the unmistakable element that takes delight in kicking another person down. What a Christian must not do is present raw ridiculehumor primarily designed to scratch our itch to hurt another person. We use wit to defeat, employ cleverness to demolish, and bask in showers of applause after partnering with murder. The outraged, and perhaps sputtering and inarticulate, target rightly recognizes that your wish for him is destruction. No wonder is it, then, when he responds in kind.
Sarcasm just breeds more of the sameself-defending sarcasm, bitterness and retaliation. But good humor, even satire, protects the targets dignity and invites him to laugh along. Well-done humor stimulates reflection and reconsideration. The best-honed humor, deft and well-targeted, can nudge a change in the course of the world.
This point is well-made. All the same, I don't think my Lord disapproves of my occasionally making a verbal cat-o'-nine-tails and driving the idiot merchants out of the temple of sanity and logic.
Did she include a picture of her hyphenated self?
/john
Narcissism is just as ugly under any guise.
So, It's wrong for me to laugh at the Rachel Corries' of the world?
I am going to hell because I laugh uproariously when the PETA freak gets every bone in her body broken by the bulls she is trying to protect?
I am in trouble with God because I feel in my heart that MOST not all but MOST of those with HIV/AIDS brought it on themselves?
there is the difference between righteous indignation at evil...and gloating when the enemy falls. When we defeat evildoers at the polls we can then be kind, show grace and not rub their noses in it....while yet firmly calling for prosecution for vote fraud. Likewise, calling for the death penalty for murderers is the way we are to purge evil from our land, as we also support Chuck Colson's prison ministry and similar worthy organizations. Arrogant gloating doesn't connect with hurting people, kind words, attitudes and deeds do.... "Love Your Enemies"
Sheesh, thanks . . . Now I feel guilty about laughing when I read the first paragraph. :-(
This is one of the hardest issues for me as a writer. I REALLY enjoy writing satire, and some of my most well-received articles are written in that vein. But I feel so uncomfortable if it involves one person in particular. I'm far more comfortable with skewering groups than in skewering one person.
I just don't like to be mean spirited - but at the same time, I do. Wah.
WWJD?
I balance it out. I trash some idiots like a redheaded stepchild, then I do penance by anonymous acts of kindness and charity.
Forgive me Father, for I know what I do.
She's actually an exception to the rule.
I Googled Frederica Mathewes-Green, and, well...hmmmm...not exactly pulchritudinous, but apparently brimming with do-gooderism. Made me wonder if she was the chider noted in the article and thus if that author's response was directed at her.
Isn't that story about Winston Churchill? There were a lot of women he loved to insult.
"All the same, I don't think my Lord disapproves..."
Isn't there a Commandment to put the idiots to scorn and jeer, for this is the only way to help them towards salvation? It might even be a religious duty.
You've been here long enough to know the rule..... Post the photo.... ;>)
/john
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