By: Thomas Clayton Booher
Author’s Note: This article demonstrates how writing (in
particular, fictional writing) reflects God’s work at creation and thereby
gives writing a certain nobility. However, I don’t want the reader to think
that if he is not a writer that he is doing nothing noble. All of our labors
are to bring glory to God, and many of them do that through the imitation of
God as the Grand Creator: cooking, gardening, carpentry, mechanical
engineering, chemistry, hair dressing, interior design, landscaping,
architecture, computer games, painting (commercial and fine art), et. al. For
those of you who have an interest in writing, I hope this reinforces what a
splendid labor awaits you.
Reflecting God’s Creation Work in Our
Writing
Man was created in God’s image and as such it is a certainty that
writers, members of the race of men, are also created in his image. There are
many things that go into the meaning of ‘God’s image’ but I want to dwell a
little on that aspect in which the role of man as creator is akin to God who is The Creator.
Whatever one’s profession or craft may be, there is always some
creativity that goes into it. Whether it be slinging garbage into a garbage
truck, preparation of a dinner for a family of five, or the swinging of a bat
to hit a ninety mile-an-hour fastball, there is creativity. Certainly, there
are common rules one must abide by - put the garbage in the back of the truck,
not the front; bring the water to a boil to cook the potatoes; keep your head
down and eyes on the ball. But within the framework of those rules, there is
also room to put your own stamp on it. I would surmise that slinging garbage
could take on a variety of styles, but it is likely that room for creativity in
that area is limited. But still there is room.
When it comes to writing, there is a vast panorama of
possibilities. I think the fundamental reason is this: a story, from conception to
completed work, has intrinsic parallels to the creation-work of God. God conceives of all creative
possibilities at once and has done so eternally. At the time of creation (that
is, that time when there was absolutely nothing but the Triune God himself, and
then by divine fiat, there was something) God sovereignly chose to bring into
being only some of those ideas. There was choice on his part; not an arbitrary
choice, but a choice based on wisdom and knowledge so deep and mysterious, we
cannot understand it except in a very small way. The actual bringing into
existence was by speech – God spoke and it was. God’s word is a creating word,
that is, it cannot help but bring into existence what is spoken.
The writer, the image-bearer of God, analogically creates; his
creation-work parallels God’s. All writers analogically create. Whether
Christian or pagan, they cannot help but do this because they cannot help but
reflect God’s image.
The writer conceives of many possibilities as he contemplates the
makings of his story - the world, the characters, the events and the
interaction of all three with each other. He chooses some among the multitude
of possibilities and abandons others. Our creating is merely analogical to
God’s and as such, there is an incomparable difference between God’s creating
and ours. God did not have to think about the possibilities in the sense of
discovering them – they were always present in his mind. But we have to think
of them, conjure them, so to speak, based on what we know and experience. These
possible ideas are borrowed and temporal; God’s ideas are original and eternal.
But regardless of the difference between our creating and God’s, there are
still similarities, and the ideas behind the stories are just a part of it.
The writer, in a manner, brings into existence a world wherein his
story unfolds. Obviously, by existence I do not mean in actuality. But we do
bring about a world with which the reader of the story resonates. One might say
that, in a certain way, the
writer brings into actual existence an imaginary world. That sounds
contradictory, but it really is not. I, along with millions of other readers,
have found myself in the midst of such an imaginary world because the story
itself has drawn me into it; through my imagination, I enter that world, and
the events and characters take on a seeming reality. I can see it in my minds
eye so vividly, that it feels real, it feels like I’m right there, observing
and sensing what the imaginary characters themselves see and feel.
In God’s creation-work, the world was brought into existence by
his powerful word. In our story-creation, the same thing happens, analogically.
Our words create a fantasy existence which the reader experiences through his
imagination.
God’s word is powerful, bringing about a handiwork that declares
his glory. It is breathtaking. It is profound. God’s creative word places us
physically within that handiwork, making us an integral part of it. We interact
with it. Our story telling should mimic the divine word; it should produce a
tale of fine artisanship, so powerful in the telling (and reading) of it, that
the reader is drawn into it and experiences it.
As Christians, the world we create through our words should
glorify God. This is done not only by transmitting unveiled biblical truth
(there is no other kind of truth), but doing such in an imaginary world whose
intricate parts are woven together through superb literary craftsmanship.
God created all-powerfully producing a magnificent creation marked
by precision, order, and design. For God, this was effortless, the mere
speaking of it into existence. We want to create an imaginary world that similarly
exhibits precision, order, and design, but unlike God’s effortless speech, the
creation of such a world takes exacting labor on our part. The writer must
throw every ounce of care he has into constructing phrases, sentences,
paragraphs that knit seamlessly a believable world. This does not mean flowery
or witty. It means realism. The world must be imaginatively real, as vivid as
the one the reader walks into when he opens the front door and steps out. It
takes careful development of character and voice, of events and their
interrelation to other events and characters. It cannot be shoddy, superficial,
wooden, hackneyed, or stereotypical.
Perhaps, Christian fantasy by its nature has the most fertile
possibilities available. It possesses great opportunities, and as image-bearers
of God and saints by his grace, we must produce the very best, excelling beyond
our secular peers. In my estimation, an undesirable portion of current-day
Christian fantasy for the young falls far short of such a standard. The Christian
fantasy writer for the young must create an imaginary world in which the reader
cannot help but slip into, where the biblical truth is unequivocal and without
fuzziness, exhibiting intelligence, skill, and craft. It should be timeless and
enduring, fascinating the youthful reader on into adulthood. As a corollary of
this, it should appeal and charm the reader of any age. But most of all, as the
material universe itself exclaims God’s glory, our fictional world should
likewise point back to the Ultimate Creator and exalt him:
The heavens declare the glory of God, and the sky above proclaims
his handiwork.
Day to day pours out speech, and night to night reveals knowledge.
There is no speech, nor are there words, whose voice is not heard.
Their voice goes out through all the earth, and their words to the end of the world.
Day to day pours out speech, and night to night reveals knowledge.
There is no speech, nor are there words, whose voice is not heard.
Their voice goes out through all the earth, and their words to the end of the world.
Psalm 19:1-4 (ESV )
Excellent! This truth encourages me to spend more time writing.
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