Wednesday 12 April 2017

The Gospel According to Arrival.

I am still thinking about the film Arrival.  It is a film that can engender thoughtfulness.  Even more so since the DVD arrived, along with the short story it is based on, Ted Chiang’s The Story of Your Life.     My thoughts include the nature of  alienness,  the ‘otherliness’ of  God, the hubris of humankind, the wisdom of Alexander Pope and the words of a fellow Anglican priest, the Revd. Prof. John Polkinhorne (Cosmologist & Theologian.) At present, too much theological thinking is very human-centred”   .

As I said in my original review Arrival does not take the convenient/lazy science–fiction shortcut of aliens arriving on Earth already speaking English.     Imagine if they did.  What dreadful language would they speak if they had been listening to countless episodes of Sgt. Bilko,  Fresh Prince of Bel-Air  and Fox News enroute.    And why would they speak English when  a quarter of humankind speaks Mandarin?    Thousands of hours of the Thoughts of Chairman Mao would have been a much more  consistent language primer, but maybe not much more enlightening.       

But Arrival goes down a road less travelled.   When the aliens arrive they want/need to learn an earthly language and we need to learn theirs.   No Babel Fish here. 

I also praised the very ‘alien-ness’  of the aliens.   Most aliens in science–fiction are essentially human, sometimes in their morphology but more often in their psychology.    There is nothing wrong with that.  Good Science Fiction is rarely about the future and the truly alien.  It is more concerned with examining the present and being human through these engaging fictional metaphors.     The proper study of Man is Man’ as Alexander Pope wrote many years ago in his Essay on Man: Second Epistle, and that is even more true – and urgent – in the 21st century.   We are now not only the greatest threat to our own survival but also to the survival of countless other species.   In Humankind evolution has reached a new phase, and it may not be functional.    

However, I do admire those writers who can imagine sentient beings who are utterly different to ourselves.  China Mieville has done it in some of his novels (see Embassy Town and Perdito Street Station) and so has Ted Chiang in the source story of Arrival.    Both Mieville and Chiang imagine differences that are  not only physical – we have had fictional beings that resemble gas clouds before now – but philosophical.    Their aliens think profoundly otherwise.     I admire both writers hugely for this.   Their aliens have something important to teach us about ourselves.  And about God.  

Imagine if you were an 'Alien Being' approaching our planet.   Would you call it Earth?   Most of it is Sea.     The Sea is teeming with life.    It is much less polluted than the land.   Some of its inhabitants are vastly intelligent.   If that last thought gives you pause, consider the work done of behalf of SETI and NASA by John C. Lilly in the 1960’s.    Tasked with exploring how to communicate with aliens if ever contact was made Lilly experimented for many years on dolphins in the Virgin Islands.    John Lilly was by human standards a genius – and also more than a bit crazy - but eventually he came to the conclusion that the dolphins could not only communicate in very complex ways with each other, but they had also learnt English.  The dolphins had even worked out that our restricted human hearing range meant that we could not hear them when they used high frequency sounds, so when trying to communicate with us they stopped using these frequencies.     Lilly eventually decided that they could understand English but we could not understand Delphinese.   Their language was just  to complex for us.    He could not find a way to get their permission to continue with  the project – in which they were, of course, captives, so he closed it down.   

The idea  of aliens arriving and talking to the dolphins and whales in the sea rather than to us on 'Earth' occurred to Douglas Adams (what ideas didn’t?) but he understood there wasn’t much of a story there to engage us humans  - apart from a great title ‘So Long And Thanks For All The Fish’.    The idea that we are not the superior beings on Earth does not appeal.  It is not a road most of us want to travel,  even in fiction.    Some humans even believe that we  are the ‘Crown of Creation’.   If so, God help us all.  

Which brings me to the subject of God.    Xenophon wrote millennia ago that ‘if horses have gods their gods will resemble horses.’    As humans we not only imagine fictional aliens as variations on the human, but our gods too - and God. By ‘God’  I mean whatever it is that monotheists worship.   In the beginning Man created God, and in his own image created He him’ we read on the sleeve of Jethro Tull’s LP Aqualung back in the day.     Not only man created God in the human image but male, and not only male but Father.   I deeply regret the influence  of Michelangelo’s image of God in the Sistine Chapel.   It is so brilliant, so persuasive and I think so dangerous because it cements in the minds of many the image of God as a strong old man in the sky.   ‘Father’ writ very large.     Oddly, I find that this is the God most atheists do not believe in.  Yet they insist that this is God.    When I say that I do not believe in this God some of them get very upset. 

I find it interesting and dispiriting  that the Song of Songs is rarely read in our Churches.  Although the word God never appears the book’s obvious metaphor is of God as Lover, not Father.    It seems that there was a real struggle before the Song of Songs was eventually included in the Hebrew Canon of Scripture, and I can see why.  Christians may find it even harder to stomach the idea of God as Lover than Jews.   The Book of Hosea is similarly shocking in some ways.    And we know how controversial it is to talk of God as She.   

So even variations on the theme of God as (Super) Human are troubling for many.   As Pope wrote ‘Know then thyself, presume not God to scan;  The proper study of mankind is man’.  God is not like us.

One of the reasons I have chosen to be a Theist – and of course it is either an indoctrinated or a deliberate choice – is that I think we humans need to believe in a Higher Power.   We are incredibly powerful creatures ourselves.    We have the power to imagine the Universe.   In us the Universe is aware of itself.    We have the brains and now the technology to explore time and space right back to the creation of our Universe and into the heart of whatever the Universe is made of at a sub-atomic quantum level.    With this power comes the potential – too often deliberately exploited - for appalling destruction.   Even the careless use of our power wreaks ecological destruction on our environment and its co-habitants.

So I think we need to be answerable to ‘something higher’,  a power  that encourages us to ‘reach higher than we can grasp’  as Robert Browning  suggested.     But thinking that the Higher Power is essentially like us only encourages our hubris.    If we think that God is like us then we are like God - and our dominant image of Godliness – at least in the West -  is male and powerful.   Of course it is helpfully corrective to see God in the vulnerability of a new born child – as the cosmologist and Anglican priest the Revd. Prof. John Polkinhorne has eloquently pointed out – and in the creative nurturing tenderness of femalekind – as generations of feminist theologians (of both sexes) have urged us.   Vulnerability, creativity, nurturing and tenderness are essential aspects of our common humanity and I want them to be associated with Godliness.    

But I still believe there is something much more mysterious – and vastly different – about the essential nature of God.   By that I mean the nature of Ultimate Reality.   If God is real then nothing can be more real than God.   If God is real then God is Ultimate Reality.  Or is it that we can call ultimate reality ‘God’?   If we decide that love is of ultimate reality then as it says in John’s epistle,  God is love and those who live in love live in God and God lives in them’.  (1 John chapter 4 verse 7.)    Whether we agree with  John or not to ‘live in God’ is still to become more closely aligned with the real.     I think that some modern aspects of spirituality –religious and non-religious – are in deep accord with this.    When some people talk about the Divine (and the Divinity we share in) it seems to be more inclusive of the mysterious and  further away from the image of God as Human/Male/Father.    As the biblical scholar and theologian Marcus Borg (might have) said ‘The Spirit of God is the water in which we live and move and have our being.  And we are largely made of water ourselves.’  (I remember what I heard, sitting at his feet one balmy night in Vancouver, but it might not be exactly what he said!)

So holding on to the utter alienness of God, while still reaching towards the  divine within us seems to me to be what worshipping (giving worth to) God is all about.     Pretending that God is some Super-human Being (or a Super-natural Being for that matter) seems to inflate ourselves, being anthropocentric and adopting a pagan comic book attitude rather than standing in awe of the reality – The Reality – we cannot even guess at.  It is the way of mystery.  But as a disciple of Jesus I do believe that we can become more human – not super-human but properly human – and more 'real'.  He is my teacher, my hope, my inspiration – you could say my salvation.  He saves me from despair when I see how low humankind can crawl.  He points me forward, and even though I do not know the destination I can see the direction.     

Tales such as The Story of Your Life and the film it inspired remind me of how little we know – maybe how little we can know – but encourage me to keep searching.  Theology is an exploration. 

If I may offer a few more words from John Polkinhorne; 

 “Of course nobody would deny the importance of human beings for theological thinking, but the time span of history that theologians think about is a few thousand years of human culture rather than the fifteen billion years of the history of the universe.”  

And  Theologians have a great problem because they're seeking to speak about God.  Since God is the ground of everything that is, there's a sense in which every human inquiry is grist to the theological mill.” 

You can see why he interests me. 


Bob