Tuesday, October 25, 2005

Narnia Unbound

A new edition of Excuse Me, Ghidorah? has been uploaded. As Brak would say, "I hope you luv it..."

You can find it thru iTunes or at podcast.net. It should show up at podcastalley.com pretty soon, too. Or you can hit the link to the right here.

This edition -- "Narnia Unbound" -- is an interview with Peter Kreeft about C. S. Lewis and the Oxford Globetrotters (otherwise known as The Inklings). The discussion ends up hashing out some basic assumptions about the sense of wonder -- prompting the listener to wrestle (I hope) with whether wonder is illusory (a whiff of something cooking where there is no actual meal), or a sound struck in the soul by an insistent Reality.

The outcome of that wrestling match, I believe, determines whether we "pass by the dragon" on our way to "the Father of Souls."

I understand St. Cyril to imply the dragon is the devil and the dragon's claws, teeth, and fiery breath are temptations. The wrestling match over the nature of wonder, I believe, has to do with a particularly sneaky sort of temptation. The temptation to believe wonder and beauty are flimsy and false is simply part of the zeitgeist, the spirit of the age, and we embrace it by osmosis. As Flannery O'Connor once put it, "If you live today you breathe in nihilism. In or out of the Church, it's the gas you breathe. If I hadn't had the Church to fight it with or to tell me the necessity of fighting it, I would be the stinkingest logical positivist you ever saw right now."

When each of us faces a moment of ultimate choice -- when we hurt, it seems, more than we hope -- it won't be our ability to recite Christian formulas that will save us. Rather, it will be our allegiance to the reality those formulas clarify and preserve. It will be something like loyalty to or friendship with that reality. It will be the degree to which we actually honestly believe God is good and the degree to which we are personally, unbreakably loyal and affectionate and partial to Jesus. It will be a deep test of the will. In the face of a catastrophe, when the last thing I feel is "good" or "worshipful," do I still say that the beauty in this world is not a cruel joke, but an expression of ultimate reality? Do I still say that evil is a temporary and parasitic thing, that the Good is real and everlasting and ultimately unshakeable?

It helps to hear someone explain that evil is a "dependent reality." It helps to know that disorder and disease cannot exist at all unless order and ease arrive first on the scene. It helps to know that if order and ease arrived first it follows that all things were good, that the whole of creation was good, before anything came along to take a swipe at it. It helps to have this as a reference inside yourself when nihilism sits on your chest and refuses to get off. This isn't dualism we're talking about here. That Imp of Nihilism sitting on your chest does not represent an Evil which is equally as powerful as the Good. No. At best, that Imp represents a blip in eternity. A terrible, painful, neverending and insurmountable blip it may, at times, seem. But anything that can be said to have begun right here on this day and eventually to end right there on that day is a piece of time and thus a blip when compared to eternity -- even if said blip consists of ten thousand "of your Earth years."

That's why endurance is so important on our end, rooted, as we are, in time and space. It is an endurance based on hope, a hope based on truth, and a truth that is commended to us by beauty and wonder (and, I think, whimsy, for lack of a better word).

In "Excuse Me, Ghidorah?" I hope to bring our presumptions out into the open. So that we know what we believe. So that when the dragon catches our scent, we already know what our response will be.

At the end of the podcast, I mention another podcast: The Golden Age of Comic Books. Look for it in iTunes or go to http://goldenagecomics.libsyn.com/. You won't be sorry.

Lint

Friday, September 30, 2005

GAAAAAAAAAAH!


Well, it seemed odd. There were around a thousand folks downloading the Apocalypse on Aisle 4 podcasts, but not that many comments on the blogsite. And then, lo and behold, I discovered that the ability to add comments was TURNED OFF! May I express a little frustration? Thank you.

GAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAH!

(ahem)

Okay. You know that just doesn't feel as good in print as it does when you can use the old vocal chords. Anyway, I apologize to everyone who attempted to add a comment and discovered they were technically mute. Please, if you have any thoughts about commodification, alien invasions that resemble commodification, or the reverse, or whatever, feel free to jot those thoughts down.

For myself, I recently was reminded of why I was so interested in commodification: I am a sucker for it. My house is full of books I haven't read yet, toys, videos, dvds, and assorted stuff shoved into corners. Very much like the multiplication of teddy bears and Happy Meal toys mentioned in "Consuming Religion." Some new friends came over and asked me about the podcast's content and it was embarassing to talk about consumer desire in such a setting. I felt like a junkie condemning drugs while looking for a good vein to tap.

Anyhow, it's a balancing act. Let me know how you are managing. Do you find yourself shopping for happiness and ending up dreary and remote? Share your pain! Your vague, indefinable, "maybe I'll look in that store" pain!

I am gearing up for more "Excuse Me, Ghidorah?" -- a three part interview with Peter Kreeft. It's a good interview, I think, primarily because I was honest about my ignorance. If Dr. Kreeft implied a logical connection, I let him know I had no idea what he meant. I then let him know that the explanation he offered was still over my head. Eventually, he had to resort to puppets and those felt boards with the two dimensional people and an After School Special starring a young Kristy McNichols.

I'll start work on it this weekend -- with a new podcast uploaded sometime next week. Also, better sound quality!

Saturday, July 23, 2005

Apocalypse on Aisle 4


This is the blog companion to Apocalypse on Aisle 4, a seminar which I presented at the 2005 Cornerstone Music Festival.

It's a big festival. But the seminar did not take place on the Main Stage in front of thousands and between sets by bands like Urinal Cake and Tomfoolery.

It took place in the Imaginarium, a medium-sized tent full of people running their mouths about C.S. Lewis, Santo and Blue Demon vs. Doctor Frankenstein, Aurora monster models, G.K. Chesterton, film noir, Flannery O'Connor, kaiju, and the philosophical underpinnings of the "prime directive" as though all of this fits within some undefinable category. Call it "mythopoeic" or "the numinous" or "wonder" with a side order of "glow in the dark."

This is the crowd that listened to me go on and on about commodification and consumer culture and alien invasions and Guy Debord. The seminar is a three parter:

  1. Apocalypse on Aisle 4
  2. The Parking Lot of Babel
  3. Household Gods
This blog gives you access to the podcast versions (see Links) and pdf versions for printing (ditto). Perhaps most importantly, you can add your comments which may then be perused by other folks (and me) who may offer further comment, etc.

Have at it.

P.S. Yes, I made up Urinal Cake and Tomfoolery.