Thursday, October 11, 2007

Eden

Alex’ recent bed-time stories have seen us working our way through J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter series. Last night, we read the first chapter of the fourth book – Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire. After that, we dipped into a work of literature no less impressive in scale, imagination and sophisticated editing - 'My Very Own Bible'.

This later reading has begun to plug a huge void in my own reading; far from seeking to find God, stories that I slept through 25 years ago now seem worth following – simply for the sake of their being interesting stories.

Having argued against reading ‘Noah and the Ark’ again, we struck a deal to set about reading through the Old Testament and New Testament, in order. So, we read the eight pages that were devoted to ‘God Made the World’ and ‘The Garden of Eden’, the second of these two stories featuring the paragraph:
God knew what had happened. ‘You can no longer stay here,’ said God. ‘You must
go out into the wide world where you will find good things and bad things all
mixed together. Your life will be hard, and one day you will die.’


In our house, that’s a recipe for formative theological debate:

Alex: I wonder why they ate the apple.
Shane: Mm.
Alex: Maybe they were just hungry.
Shane: Maybe.
Alex: (pause, thinking) So, if God had just kept working for a bit longer, and made them a packed lunch, then maybe they wouldn’t have had to eat the apple?
Shane: I suppose.
Alex: Or he could have just given them a massive packet of Quavers.
Shane: Mm.
Alex: (contentedly) Ah well, fat pigs!
Shane: Be sure to not let your grandma hear you talk like that.
Alex: (objecting) I didn’t call her a fat pig! I called Adam and Eve fat pigs!
Shane: Yes, I know you did – and grandma wouldn’t find that funny.
Alex: Why not?
Shane: Because… because grandma likes God a lot, and she wouldn’t want to hear you calling his creations ‘fat pigs’.
Alex: Well -
Shane: It’s sleep time.
Alex: Can I call you a f-
Shane: No. Good night.
Alex: Good night, thin pig!
Shane: Good night.

I sense that grandma will soon face an odd biblical grilling, and as Alex mixes up his stories, there’s a good chance that she will have to dispel such notions as God ever being a caster of spells, mixer of potions or indeed a plain-as-day wizard.

I bet Jesus would have been a Gryffindor.

5 comments:

OldHorsetailSnake said...

I wonder what a Bible written by Alex would contain?

Anonymous said...

Lots of practical tips - he's a Natural Born Educator. And probably a lot on animals too - especially cats. In fact, I suspect there'd be a great big book on cats - proffering God's will regarding how best to entertain and be entertained by them.

Zinnia Cyclamen said...

So that's where Alex gets his story-mixing skills from.

LB said...

...and on the fourth day, God created reconstituted cheese based floaty-light snacks for the nutrition of Man and Woman.

perhaps.

Pat said...

Well this Grandma would say:
'Alex why do you call them fat pigs when they have only eaten an apple?'
He sounds a delightful boy to have around BTW.