Luke 15:11 - And he said, “A certain man had two sons. . .
Jesus told stories and by that we conclude that
story-telling is a legitimate and noble practice. I recently read an article by
one of my Facebook friends (E. Stephen Burnett) the title of which was How to Glorify God with Wizards, Captain America , and Spider-Man. It seems to me this friend has strong leanings toward a reformed perspective (influenced by Abraham Kuyper and Herman Bavinck), and I
anticipated a theological defense of what the title intimated. However, he
surprised me, and though he indicated that he could provide such a defense, he
opted against that and chose rather to show from his own experience how one may
glorify God in that way. It was quite intriguing, and I am in full agreement
not only with the premise, but also in the way in which he demonstrated it
through his life’s experiences rather than a biblical treatment. Here is an
example of those experiences:
I can’t always say how, but that truth imaged by a fictional hero has aided my spiritual “revival” for years. I followed Spidey’s web all the way to the true story — God’s story — of the Hero who surrendered Himself to help people become the heroes they should be. To this day, I can credit the original Spider-Man films for helping save my marriage before it even began.
I was a little hesitant to present this example lest
it be misunderstood that my friend’s theology saw Christ’s heroism at the cross
as only an example by which others may become heroes as well. I know that is
not the case, but it underscores a problem that is inherent with fictional heroes
invented by the secular mind. They are horizontally oriented rather than
vertically. They do not take their starting point in the biblical world and
life view, but from the one which man devises out of his own resources, which
are actually borrowed from God. As a result, though the hero may be powerfully
inspiring and noble, and though he may illustrate to some measure what we find
to be true from a biblical perspective, it is dubious at best. Not merely
because of the finitude of the secular creator, but because of the tendency of
such a one to create something that tends to exalt the creature rather than the
Creator (cf Rom 1:25 ).
Spidey’s epiphany of the truth in Spider Man 2 is a
powerful challenge to the movie-goer in the context of Dr. Octavius’s relentless and unmercifully violent drive to complete his dream at all costs.
Even so, Spider-Man 3, in my opinion, is even more potent as it portrays the virtue
of forgiveness in an evocative, nearly tear-jerking manner. How is it that a
story written from an unbiblical world-view, whose setting itself is
atheological (people live and work as though there is no God, regardless of any
professed beliefs in the existence of God) can include such noble ideas?
The overarching answer is what theologians call common
grace. It is grace that God has bestowed on all men alike, regardless of
their relationship to him. Louis Berkhof explains that "[common grace] curbs the
destructive power of sin, maintains in a measure the moral order of the
universe, thus making an orderly life possible, distributes in varying degrees
gifts and talents among men, promotes the development of science and art, and
showers untold blessings upon the children of men.”[1]
Wizards, Captain America , and Spider-man are fantasy
characters representative of a special type of literary art, and, as Berkhof
noted, the ability to produce such art is a result of the distribtution of
God’s gifts among men. These are gifts for which all should give God the honor,
yet the unbelieving sinner can do so only in a superficial way because he does
not know God through a faith in Jesus Christ resulting in a renewed mind and
enlightened heart (Rom 12:2; 2 Cor 4:6; Eph 1:18; 4:23; Col 3:10). He may sense
that there is a Higher Being who is responsible for his artistic greatness, and
acknowledge that, but he does not sense that he should love that Higher Being
with all of his heart, soul, mind, and strength (Luke 10:27). The gifted
secular literary artist writes about what he knows to be true of right and
wrong (Rom 2:14 -15), but
does not really know why it is true. He just knows it. He knows there is good
and evil, and his God-given literary skill enables him to write in such wonderful
imagery that these truths can come across very powerfully. And yet, unless the
truths of his novel or screenplay or poetry are overtly grounded in the gospel,
though they may persuade some, even unbelieving sinners, to outwardly alter
their behavior in one degreee or another, they cannot transform from the inside
out. Such stories may inhibit sinful behavior, but they cannot free from sin
because there is no gospel in them. Their usefulness for true spiritual growth
is profitable only for the Christian who recognizes the virtues as beliefs and
behavior that are the result of a new birth which changes the heart (cf 2 Cor
5:17; Eph 4:24; Col 3:10) and for that reason he works them out in his life because
he knows that it is God that works in him to do his good will (Phil 2:12-13).
How can secular man write such stories? It is because
he is in touch with the predicament of this world and himself though he is not
in touch with Creator of the world through his Son. Secular man is not unintelligent. He can observe
and analyze. His sinfulness does not inhibit that, as intelligence is one of
those gifts God disperses commonly among human beings. His observations and
analysis are influenced by another common grace, which is the law written on
the heart (Rom 2:14 -15).
He cannot help but sense the right and wrong in this world and judge it to be
truly that, good and evil. There is no man-made story, tragedy or comedy, which
is not shaped by the overall character of this present age – the conflict
between good and evil (cf Gal 1:4; Rev
19:11 -21). And though it provides opportunity for the secular man
to put his twist on the true, the good, and the beautiful, it is only the
Christian who can listen to it and discern the truths that underlie the
story-world. As such, there is a legitimate place for the Christian not only to
attend such movies as my friend alludes to, or read the stories that such
movies are based on, but to carefully think about them and see what is in them
that may help him, in light of God’s word, live up to the true gospel standard.