"Christian" fiction, again
I'm wandering around these threads in this area looking for guidelines. I'm not all that happy about what I'm turning up.
C. S. Lewis (somewhere in God in the Dock, I think) once discoursed on what it means to be "Christian" in any except the overty religious sense (i.e. when at worship services). Specifically, he had in mind the "witness" which Christians give to non-Christians around them.
He derided the notion that to witness or to live as a Christian meant saying more prayers in public, or composing more little pamphlets to pass out to friends and strangers alike. Instead, he argued for going boldly into whatever human endeavor one would ordinarily find oneself, and then to earn the reputation of doing that endeavor at the absolute peak of achievement. The kind of thing he had in mind was something like this -- in the field of engineering, if the very best text or resource were written by a Christian (even better, by Christians), then this would be the best witness possible (leaving aside a straightforward gospel presentation). The idea is that a gospel presentation has little or no credibility apart from the integrity of the person presenting it.
In the past I knew a man whose text on human pathology was the standard text in medical schools around the world. He was a solidly orthodox Christian. That's the thing Lewis was urging on his hearers.
Take this idea to fiction and what do you get?
Well, there are a number of Christian authors in the sense Lewis was talking about. He was one himself, an internationally recognized authority on literary criticism and certain segments of English literature. Tolkien had his own niches carved out -- niches of sheer intellectual bravado and quality -- which made his creative efforts (The Ring Trilogy, the Hobbit) good works which adorn the gospel. So also with other Inklings members (Sayers, for example).
Question: when thinking of "Christian fiction," do Lewis, Tolkien, or Sayers leap to one's mind? How about Chesterton (Father Brown myteries), or Ellis Peters (Brother Cadfael mysteries), or P. D. James (murder mysteries). In other threads I've discovered that even Jan Karon's Mitford books do NOT come to mind when one thinks of Christian fiction. This makes me very uneasy.
Why not Christian horror? Are there not things in this world that are fairly dripping with horror, which are rightly perceived in a Christian worldview?
Why not Christian murder mysteries? What more immediate application of Ephesians 5:13 than a well-told tale of murder most foul and its discovery and exposure by faithfully dogged pursuers of the truth? Jane Marple murder mysteries are, in this view, quite Christian and Miss Marple doesn't have to be quoting a Bible verse every other paragraph for this to be true.
As mentioned already, Lewis, and Tolkien, and MacDonald, and Chesterton have already hinted at the possibilities of Christian fantasy.
Christian bodice-rippers? okay, that's over the line in more ways than one.
Christian westerns? Why not?
Christian sci-fi? Some are trying this, but the results are problematic so far (for much the same reason that Lewis' "science fiction trilogy" was problematic as far as the sci-fi genre is concerned).
The biggest anxiety to me is what is meant by readers and publishers by the word "Christian" in the lable "Christian fiction." You see this in the debate that rages among some evangelicals over the Harry Potter books. Some damn them as heinous and insidious incursions of witchcraft into the church. Others hail them as some of the most innovative and original exposition of the Christian worldview since Tolkien (though no one argues that the sheer craftsmanship of Tolkien has been rivaled by Rowling).
Does Christian fiction require a bible verse every so many paragraphs? Are the characters necessarily overt Christians? Are the plot conflicts free of "not nice things?" Is the point to be "heart-warming," to the exlusion of any other purpose? Jonathan Edwards made history by preaching about hell. Why should a Christian novel which inspired the same fear be deemed sub-Christian (I'm guessing that it would be so deemed).
These are the kinds of things that disturb me about Christian fiction.
Homesar