• 'A Wrinkle in Time' author Madeleine L'Engle on the power of storytelli

    From Steve Hayes@21:1/5 to All on Sat Oct 28 05:19:37 2023
    XPost: rec.arts.books.childrens, alt.books, alt.books.inklings
    XPost: alt.religion.christian.episcopal, alt.religion.christianity

    From the ENS Archives: ‘A Wrinkle in Time’ author Madeleine L’Engle on the power of storytelling

    Madeleine L’Engle, who wrote more than 60 books ranging from
    children’s stories to theological reflection, died Sept. 6, 2007, in Litchfield, Connecticut, at 88. She is shown here two years earlier.
    Photo: Square Fish Books

    [Episcopal News Service] The March 9 release of Ava DuVernay’s movie
    version of the classic — and controversial — children’s book “A
    Wrinkle in Time” has brought a new awareness of author Madeleine
    L’Engle who was a world-renowned lay Episcopal playwright, poet and
    author of fiction and nonfiction books.

    L’Engle, who wrote more than 60 books ranging from children’s stories
    to theological reflection, died Sept. 6, 2007, in Litchfield,
    Connecticut. She was 88. In its obituary of L’Engle, the New York
    Times reported that “A Wrinkle in Time” was then in its 69th printing
    and had sold 8 million copies. Those figures are sure to increase with
    the release of the movie.

    “A Wrinkle in Time” won the Newberry Award in 1963. L’Engle traveled widely from her home base in New York, leading retreats, lecturing at writers’ conferences and addressing church and student groups abroad.
    In 1965 she became a volunteer librarian at the Episcopal Cathedral
    Church of St. John the Divine in New York. She later served for many
    years as writer-in-residence at the cathedral.

    “A Wrinkle in Time” director Ava DuVernay, left, speaks with Storm
    Reid, who plays Meg Murry, between scenes. Photo: Walt Disney Pictures

    L’Engle’s work expressed her Christian theology and has been compared
    to C. S. Lewis. “A Wrinkle in Time” rankled some conservative
    Christians and the book ranks 90th on the American Library
    Association’s list of the 100 most-banned/challenged books of the
    early 2000s. Critics said the book combined Christian themes and the
    occult, and they disputed L’Engle’s contention that science and
    religion can coexist.

    There are echoes of the Gospel of John and 1 Corinthians in the book.
    After the disappearance of her scientist father, three peculiar beings
    send Meg Murry, her brother and her friend to space in order to find
    him. Three mysterious astral travelers known as Mrs. Whatsit, Mrs. Who
    and Mrs. Which lead the children on a dangerous journey to a planet
    that possesses all the evil in the universe.

    In 1995, L’Engle spoke with Episcopal News Service about the power of storytelling and her theology.

    ‘Story Is Where We Look for Truth’ An Interview with Madeleine L’Engle Episcopal News Service
    January 19, 1995
    By Neil M. Alexander

    Neil M. Alexander was vice-president and editorial director of the
    United Methodist Publishing House when he interviewed L’Engle. He is
    now president and publisher emeritus. He is not to be confused with
    Bishop J. Neil Alexander, the current vice president and dean of the
    School of Theology at Sewanee The University of the South.

    What are you seeking to discover and share through your writing?

    I wrote my first story when I was five, because I wanted to know why
    my father was coughing his lungs out from mustard gas he was exposed
    to in the First World War. Why is it that people hurt each other? Why
    don’t people love each other? I learned quickly that a story is the
    best place to explore these unanswerable questions. Facts are limited;
    they don’t carry us very far. Story is where we look for truth.

    Which questions do you find yourself asking over and over again?

    All the big ones. The questions that adolescents ask — and that we
    should never stop asking. Unless we continually bring questions to our
    faith, it will become sterile and cold. And so we ask: Why did God
    create the universe? Is there a purpose to it? Why did God take the
    incredible risk of making creatures with free will? And this leads us
    to ponder why, if God is good, do terrible things happen? Of course,
    there are no simple answers. If you have people with free will, they
    are going to make mistakes, and our actions do have consequences.

    Is too much emphasis given to the importance of individual freedom?
    Would it be better if our communities provided more narrow boundaries?

    I remember many years ago being in Russia with my husband. After a
    concert we were walking back to our hotel late at night, with no fear whatsoever, through tunnels beneath Red Square. When we came up on the
    other side of the square, I turned to my husband and said, “The price
    for this sense of security is too high.” With freedom there also comes
    risk, but it is worth it.

    Ava DuVernay’s movie version of the classic children’s book “A Wrinkle
    in Time” was released March 9 and has renewed interest in the book and
    its author. It has also prompted a host of other books related to the
    story and the movie.

    Where do you find the resources to sustain your search, to help you
    struggle with the ambiguity of being human?

    Reading the Bible has always been a part of my daily life. My parents
    were Bible-reading people, and I grew up reading the Bible as a great storybook, which indeed it is. It is remarkably comforting to me that
    of all the protagonists in scriptural stories, not one is qualified to
    do what God is asking. In a sense we are all unqualified. If you were
    going to start a great nation, would you pick a hundred-year-old man
    and a woman past menopause? That’s the kind of thing God does.

    I also read in the area of quantum mechanics and particle physics,
    because these are disciplines where people are dealing with the nature
    of being. These writers describe a universe in which everything is
    totally interrelated, where nothing happens in isolation. They have
    discovered that nothing can be studied objectively — because to look
    at something is to change it and be changed by it. I find such
    discussions helpful in framing theological responses to questions
    about the nature of the universe.

    You have an incredible ability to draw upon your memory, to discern
    truth from events in your own life. How might others be helped to
    develop this capacity?

    One thing that is helpful is keeping an honest and unpublishable
    journal. What you write down you tend not to forget. I’ve been keeping journals since I was eight. It is a way of having a say in the telling
    of our own stories. The act of writing it down helps set it in our
    memory. For storytellers, memory is very important because we can’t
    write a story without drawing on our own experience.

    How does that apply to our spiritual pilgrimage as Christians? Do you
    think the faith community has developed a good memory to draw upon?

    I don’t. I think we have forgotten far too much. I am concerned, for
    example, that we take Jesus’ parables out of context. We treat them as isolated illustrations in and of themselves, but they make much more
    sense if you know when they were given in the course of Jesus’
    ministry and to whom he was speaking.

    I don’t believe you can be a Christian in isolation from the support
    and collective memory of the believing community. My church is very
    important to me, and so is the group of women I meet with every Monday
    for study and prayer. We are in this life together, not alone.

    Some time back there were reports about folks speculating that you are
    a “new age” thinker. What was that all about?

    I haven’t the faintest idea. I once asked someone what led people to
    say I was promoting “new age” concepts. The response was, “You mention the rainbow, and that’s a sign of new age thinking.” I said, “Hey,
    wait a minute. The rainbow is the sign of God’s covenant with his
    people. Don’t hand our symbols over to those promoting ‘new age’ spirituality. Don’t let faddish groups take away what God has given
    us.”

    “A Wrinkle in Time,” whose original book jacket is shown here, was
    rejected 26 times before it was published and won the Newberry Award
    in 1963. Photo: Wikipedia

    I was sent a newspaper clipping that cited my book “A Wrinkle in Time”
    as one of the 10 most censored books in the United States. When it
    first appeared in 1962, it was hailed by many as a Christian work. In
    the intervening years not one word of that book has changed. So, what
    has happened to cause people to want it banned?
    What do you think happened?

    I think there are some people who are terribly afraid … afraid that
    they cannot control or manipulate God, that God might love people they
    don’t love, that God’s love is too all-embracing, and that we don’t
    have to earn it. All we have to do is say we are sorry, and God throws
    a big party.

    That is frightening to some people. They seem to feel that they can’t
    be happy in heaven unless hell is heavily populated. I don’t really understand that.

    Do you worry that an overemphasis on unconditional grace might lead to
    giving license for the self-centered pursuit of personal comfort
    without accountability?

    Unconditional grace is not the same as permissiveness, though I think
    it gets confused with that sometimes. We are creatures who sin. I
    don’t think that makes God angry. On the contrary, I think that makes
    God incredibly sad.

    I think we hurt God by our sinning and by manipulating the idea of unconditional grace into something that makes it easier for us to go
    on sinning. Grace does not give us permission to be destructive
    people. God’s grace ought to give us the courage to try to give
    pleasure to God.

    At night when I read my evening prayers, I ask myself, “What have I
    done that would have hurt God today?” and “What have I done to give pleasure to God?”

    How do your books help people experience God’s grace and grow in faithfulness?

    I have had many letters from people who say that the loving God
    revealed in my books has changed their lives. They tell me that they
    have discovered that they no longer have to be afraid of God.

    “The Summer of the Great Grandmother” is about my mother’s 90th and
    last summer. I was very angry about what was happening to her. I wrote
    about walking down the dirt road in front of the house shouting, “God, don’t do this to my mother. You take her!”

    I have received letters from readers who said, “I didn’t know I was
    allowed to be angry.” Well, of course we are allowed to be angry, but
    we are also called not to stay stuck in our anger.

    In “The Irrational Season” you say that male and female will not be completely reconciled until Christ returns. Yet in “Two Part
    Invention” you describe the extraordinary harmony of your own
    marriage. We seem to be in a time of struggle over male and female
    roles and relationships. What are your current thoughts about this
    subject?

    There is a lot of antagonism in the world between male and female. I
    think we are paying much too much attention to gender conflict. What I
    hear people asking is: Does God really love me? Will I continue as who
    I am after death? Will God continue to help me grow? Why is there so
    much pain? Why, if God is good, do we do so many wrong things? I wish
    the church would address itself to that.

    We see violence, deprivation, suffering and hatefulness close to home
    and across the world. As you survey what is happening, how do you dare
    to be hopeful?

    I am hopeful because I don’t think God is going to fail with creation.
    I think somehow or other love is going to come through. Christ is with
    us.

    After my husband died, I lived several years with my two
    granddaughters who were in college. They questioned things, and
    sometimes we didn’t agree, but at least we were all struggling to find
    truth.

    Because we are human and finite, and God is divine and infinite, we
    can never totally comprehend the living, wondrous God whom we adore.
    So, there are always unanswered questions as God pushes us along and
    helps us grow in love. But my granddaughters and the other young
    people I meet are willing to ask and struggle with the important
    questions. That gives me hope.

    Source: <https://www.episcopalnewsservice.org/2018/03/13/from-the-ens-archives-wrinkle-in-time-author-madeleine-lengle-on-the-power-of-storytelling/>
    or
    https://t.co/8s3EqCHzVG


    --
    Stephen Hayes, Author of The Year of the Dragon
    Sample or purchase The Year of the Dragon: https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/907935
    Web site: http://www.khanya.org.za/stevesig.htm
    Blog: http://methodius.blogspot.com
    E-mail: shayes@dunelm.org.uk or if you use Gmail hayesstw@telkomsa.net

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Michael F. Stemper@21:1/5 to Steve Hayes on Sun Oct 29 08:56:56 2023
    XPost: rec.arts.books.childrens, alt.books, alt.books.inklings
    XPost: alt.religion.christian.episcopal, alt.religion.christianity

    On 27/10/2023 22.19, Steve Hayes wrote:
    From the ENS Archives: ‘A Wrinkle in Time’ author Madeleine L’Engle on the power of storytelling

    Madeleine L’Engle, who wrote more than 60 books ranging from
    children’s stories to theological reflection, died Sept. 6, 2007, in Litchfield, Connecticut, at 88. She is shown here two years earlier.



    Source: <https://www.episcopalnewsservice.org/2018/03/13/from-the-ens-archives-wrinkle-in-time-author-madeleine-lengle-on-the-power-of-storytelling/>

    Interesting article. Thanks for posting it.

    --
    Michael F. Stemper
    I refuse to believe that a corporation is a person until Texas executes one.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)