“…the word of the Lord came to the prophet
who had brought him back…”
--1 Kings 13:20
I’m still thinking about this story. It won’t let me alone,
though I may be alone in this. For me,
the real question is why did the story teller tell this story? If we assume that the story teller behind the
stories in the Bible is God, that it is actually His word, then my question is:
why is God telling us a story about a prophet who lies to a “man of God,” and
tricks him into not fulfilling God’s call, and yet the liar goes unpunished,
while the man who was tricked is killed by a lion for not doing exactly what
God told him to do… and—another thing: Why put the prophecy of this doom into
the mouth of the prophet who lied? Why
would the writer/creator of this tale, whether it is God or just a regular old
story teller, create such a troubling story? Why not make it neater, with an
obvious moral for the edification of the audience?
And, for me, well… I’ve ben struggling with what the actual
lesson of this story is. And now I am
beginning to wonder if that struggle, my struggle, isn’t the point –or at least
part of God’s lesson.
I keep getting hung up on the unpunished lie, but this story
is no more a story about an unpunished lie (and a king’s withered hand [cf. 13:4])
than Hamlet
is a play about ghosts and sword fighting! Which is what I thought Hamlet
was about when I first bought myself a copy at the used bookstore on Long Point
(near the old Kmart). It was 1973 and the copy I bought (for .65 cents) had a drawing
of a dead body, a ghost and a man with a sword on the cover –and since I had just
finished reading Frankenstein and Dracula and (I think) had just seen Captain
Blood for the first time, it looked like the perfect cover to the
perfect book for me! And heck, I already
had part of it memorized: “To be or not to be, …”
Yet, –much to my 13-year-old self’s consternation— Hamlet
is not really a play about ghosts and swordplay; as I have learned with time
and reading and rereading, it is so very much more. It is a work that –in
fact—reveals itself again and again to be so much more with each rereading.
There is a complexity to it, and a multiplicity of meanings
that arise from its multi-faceted characters and plot and the boldness and
largeness of its language. Some readers
will focus on the patriarchal elements and derive lessons about male dominance
and female subservience, others will see themes of Oedipal conflict in the struggles
between Hamlet and his step father (and his beloved mother), and still others
will find Hamlet’s psychological turmoil over the idea of revenge to be the
most compelling elements of the play… but, for me –when I taught the play to
high school seniors—I began to hear in it man’s struggle to define himself and
his place in a universe where he feels alone and compelled to make his own
decisions about what is right and wrong; I heard in it a drama of life in a
post-Catholic world. At the beginning of
the play, Hamlet returns from Wittenberg (i.e. Luther’s
95 Theses), and Laertes comes home from the University
of Paris (i.e. scholasticism, tradition & Thomas Aquinas). And throughout the play Hamlet questions
whether he has the right to decide things on his own (i.e. interpret the world
for himself), while Laertes does what he is told –i.e. obeys the magisterium of
king, culture and family… Yes, I know there is more to it than that. Seemingly nothing about the play is as simple
as one might imagine upon first, second, third, fourth, eight, twelfth reading.
The writing is so imaginative, alive and unsettling that each time I read it, I
hear or learn something new; with each new gaze, the depths of works like Hamlet
and The
Divine Comedy, Homer’s epics, The Bible, seem only to grow deeper
and the truths ever more profound. One is
left to wonder who wrote such things (and how).
Which brings me back to the enigmatic story at hand. In my
reading, the complexity in this story derives more from what has been left out
than what has been included. The fact
that no judgment is offered about the prophet who lies, leaves us to ponder his
actions, and his role in the story? To
contemplate the meaning of his role. And
why God would continue to use him to voice his message. What could that mean? According to my Jerome
Biblical Commentary some scholars have argued that this is a midrash story
redacted into a historical document, and their focus is on the “man of God”
punished for being disobedient, but my focus is on the source of his
disobedience: the unpunished lie. The more I meditate on this element of the
story, the stranger it seems to me. Of
course, one might dismiss this enigmatic element by saying: clearly it wasn’t
important to the author; so let it go and move on. Don’t waste your time.
But when I was learning to pray Lectio Divina we were taught
to hang onto that little piece, that word or phrase or element that caught our
attention –hold onto it, because that was what we were being given to ponder.
And so, there are two things I am still turning over in my
head about this apparently unpunished lie.
First: was it actually unpunished?
Is the punishment of the lie found in the message the lying prophet is
called to deliver? When he turns to his
dinner guest and says:
“This is what the Lord says: ‘You have defied the word
of the Lord and have not kept the command the Lord your
God gave you. You came back and ate bread and drank
water in the place where he told you not to eat or drink.
Therefore your body will not be buried in the tomb
of your ancestors.’”—1 Kings 13: 21-22
of the Lord and have not kept the command the Lord your
God gave you. You came back and ate bread and drank
water in the place where he told you not to eat or drink.
Therefore your body will not be buried in the tomb
of your ancestors.’”—1 Kings 13: 21-22
What horror must have run through his own mind –being the
one who lied to the “man of God,” knowing that it was through him and his lie
that God’s word had been defiled; is that not (perhaps) his punishment: to live
with the knowledge of the dishonor and doom that he helped bring to a fellow
prophet? Certainly some of my own worst
memories are of the evil I have brought to others, even more than the evil I
have committed on my own.
And second: perhaps one thing God is telling me, is this: it’s not always about the answers; sometimes
it is about the questions. The
complexity of this little simple story inspires me to ask and ponder –and maybe
what God is teaching me through it is this: nothing is ever as simple as it
looks. Open your eyes. Open your heart.
Look. Listen. Ponder… Ask questions. Ponder some more.
How often do we look at someone and think: oh, she’s this or
he’s that… she’s a snob, or he’s a bully, or she’s a conservative and he’s a
liberal, or she’s a goth and he’s a jock… We dismiss the complexity of their
humanity by compressing it into a label.
But, no one is that simple. Everyone contains a multitude of sorrows and joys and
contradictions --unspoken… The truth is, as Bob Dylan once said: "...even the president of the United States must sometimes have to stand naked..." There is always something more to be revealed. And (of course) some things that need to stay between you and your bathroom mirror.... Anyway, as Hemingway so famously claimed, sometimes the
most important part of a story –is what was left out. Think about that for a while... and when you're done, ponder it some more.