One Thousand Gifts: Chapter One
[This is my promised review of Ann Voskamp's book, One Thousand Gifts. I think I'll review it one chapter at a time. My previous post explaining the purpose of these review posts, is here.]
The death of Ann's sister was a horrible
tragedy, and worse perhaps because Ann and the parents had to
physically witness the violent death. As Ann's father says, the child
didn't just die, she was killed.
This left a visual scar on Ann particularly. It does seem
that the family handled the tragedy as badly as a family can:
extending the damage, nursing the wound, not finding any redeeming
aspects to it at all, harboring bitterness and anger. That's the
worst possible way to handle any negative event.
That said, the event damaged Ann
deeply, into her adult life, when it did not have to. Her parents
were probably at fault there, and should have sought ways to keep the
death from harming the other children, even if they couldn't keep it
from harming themselves. The father's nurturing of the pain seems
mimicked in Ann's attitude and feelings. “Losses do that. One
life-loss can infect the whole of a life.” They should have kept
the initial tragedy from spawning additional ones. They didn't.
Later, Ann describes a better response
in her brother-in-law's handling of his boys' deaths. The man
attempts to look deeply into God's will and purposes, and is at least
able to come to the wise conclusion that life events are best left in
God's hands; His acts are perfect even when they include death.
Especially when they include death. (I like his understanding of Hezekiah and Manasseh.) Our perspective on death is so
skewed, so wrong, so blinded, we cannot assess it correctly. God
chooses to remove a precious child from this dark, damaged planet,
and take her to safety in heaven, and we humans scream in anger at
the rescue? Why do we do that? Because we're selfish. We want the
dead loved one here, with us. Ann's parents never helped her to see
death correctly.
All that to say, I'd still insist that
I've known people, particularly Christians, who have suffered much
more grievously than Ann did, and did not respond in such a hateful
way. But I think she'd agree with that – that her response was
wrong, and needed correction. So that's no criticism of her; it's
just an honest statement. Although the death of a child is a deep
wound, suffering can get much, much worse than the death of one
child, but the real issue is how we respond. Ann responded with
darkness. Some people (even pagans!) respond with light. Ann's story
will, I think, be about struggling her way to the light. And that is
certainly a story worth telling!
I'd like to address one theological
issue in this chapter, which she talks about on pp. 14 - 16. She
asserts that mankind's fundamental sin is ingratitude – a desiring
for something better, not accepting what God gives us in this world. She says,
“...what I have, who I am, where I am, how I am, what I've got –
this simply isn't enough.” This well of dissatisfaction in her soul
is an agony to her, and she sees it as the first sin, as the basic evil.
She does well to examine the Garden of
Eden in this chapter, but I look at the issue differently. When
humans long for something more excellent, more beautiful, more
secure, more fulfilling, I don't see that as a sin. I see that as a
longing for heaven – for Eden again, for the New Earth. Are we
supposed to be satisfied on this fallen Earth? I don't think so. We
can be thankful for many good things God gives us here, but we should
never think that we can be satisfied here. We can't. We're designed
for heaven, and we can never be fully joyful until we are there with
Him.
Ann blames the evils of this broken
world on man, on our ingratitude, our lack of satisfaction, on the
poison of the first sin. She admits, “I thirst for some roborant,
some elixir, to relieve the anguish of what I've believed: God isn't
good.” Longing for an elixir for sin isn't a bad thing. It's
exactly what we're supposed to long for. For some reason, Ann labels
that longing as a sin.
What I'm saying is that I'm supposed
to be dissatisfied with this world. It's broken. God doesn't expect
me to pretend otherwise. I'm not to put on rose-colored glasses, look
around me and say, “It's all beautiful! It's all good! It's all
holy!” Because it's not. That kind of adulation is reserved for
only one place: heaven. It's an offense to describe other places
using language and feelings that are reserved for God's home only.
She does not go this far in the first chapter, but I mention it
because I've read her blog a lot, and I think I know where she's
headed with this idea.
Otherwise, however, I find this first
chapter to be very readable, very engaging, and often beautiful. The
writing is occasionally disjointed and choppy, but when she sticks to
story, she does well.
There is no evidence of the mystic
here, that I can find. But I'll say this: Ann's life began with a
massive, life-changing experience. She was visual witness to a
horrific act. Her sister didn't die of disease in a hospital bed, or
die in her sleep; she died a bloody, violent death in front of Ann's
eyes. It's possible that this engagement with first-hand experience,
early on, made an indelible mark on her, and caused her to look for
other, later experiences as a means of compensating for this first
one.
5 comments:
I've popped over to Ann's blog to see what she and her son are doing in Haiti.
Her book has really touched hearts and I wonder what her next book will be (I haven't explored this).
I like her and I think her book glows a little. Seriously, when I go to the book store and see all the good books on the bargain racks and tables, I trust that The Creator of all, understands us so well and knows what our hearts and minds will respond to. It's a money making business, publishing. I guess the real test is the individual who is journeying toward the King and longs for Him more after reading a book. Sending a book out into the world seems like a very serious calling. I bet you've felt that about your books, too. I could tell from Ann's words that she is scholarly and literary. She's a word lover. I'm reminded of all our Lord's words about children and coming to Him just like they did and it gives me a gentler, more humble perspective.
I agree with everything you say, Pom. Sending a book out into the world is a rather scary thing. Ann is a lover of words, of scenes, of pictures. She's done a brave thing. I do think she is a mystic, but I don't think that's a bad thing. We desperately need Christian mystics to balance the effect of overly zealous orthodox folks, who will narrow the faith down. Mystics tend to expand us. But mystics are not cautious, parsing people. They will give you the wonderfully true along with the slightly wrong. It's our job to examine, pull out the tweezers, and separate the two. I mean no violence to Ann or her book. It is not arrogance that prompts me to write about her book. Rather it is a desire to find what's right, and to see if there is any wrong, according to my own limited sights. But just because a person sends a book out into the world, does NOT mean that everyone else must just smile and accept and say nothing. I think some may feel that's the best path. We also need others who will dissect. That's my job as a literature teacher.
Yes, yes. We're on the same page, friend. I bet you are a way better literature teacher than old Pom Pom. Smile!
Your last sentence on this post. Yes, and again, yes.
Hey MK. I am thoroughly intrigued at your series on Ann. I have hardly read her blog - the music drives me to drink - and her style is just not one that typically appeals to me. Although once, a long time ago, I did read something from her that I wanted to respond to, and when I tried, I realized that she didn't allow comments. I was so turned off, I never went back. To me, blogging is ALL about the comments, the community, the conversation. So that was that.
Since then, the book, the fame... I haven't paid much attention. But for some reason I saw your first post about her in your sidebar and started reading your series. I have no issues, I don't know enough about her or her story to make an informed opinion, but I'm finding your thoughts intriguing.
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