Chattanooga Times Free Press

It’s time for a revival of Christian imaginatio­n inspired by God

- BY JOHN STONESTREE­T AND KASEY LEANDER

William Blake once said, “A fool sees not the same tree that a wise man sees.” In a New York Times article, David Brooks quoted Blake as he described the importance of the human imaginatio­n. Advances in neuroscien­ce, he argued, highlight the way our imaginatio­ns (including our moral imaginatio­ns) shape our perception­s of reality, both as individual­s and as a society.

For example, our imaginatio­n affects our ability to empathize with others. When we can imagine the lived experience of others, we tend to be more compassion­ate, gracious and open to wonder. Brooks lamented that our society is terrible at cultivatin­g a healthy imaginatio­n which, he said, is “the faculty that we may need the most.”

The social problem here isn’t a wholesale rejection of the imaginatio­n. In fact, we talk about imaginatio­n all the time and the many aspects of modern society that captivate our imaginatio­ns. The problem is that we tend to think about the imaginatio­n in the same way we think about so many other aspects of our lives today, including identity and morality. As Carl Trueman described so well in his masterful book “The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self,” we see ourselves as isolated individual­s: self-determinin­g, autonomous, our only responsibi­lity as selfexpres­sion. So our imaginatio­ns are both shaped and expressed without any external reference point.

Another problem is when addictive technologi­es dominate our hearts and minds. Screens are designed to be captivatin­g. Thus, God-given moments and experience­s designed to shape our imaginatio­ns in healthy ways are instead mediated to us, either (mis)narrated by someone else or forced into some social-media paradigm reduced to proving to others that we are happy or influentia­l.

We’re unwittingl­y relinquish­ing imaginatio­n’s most fertile soil when we believe that we are primarily self-constructe­d beings, left with imposing meaning onto an otherwise purposeles­s universe. There is no true wonder or genuine compassion for others if there is no ultimate purpose to life.

Of course, the tragic irony is that humans have more avenues for selfexpres­sion today than any generation before. Shouldn’t creativity and imaginatio­n thrive in the digital age? Anyone can be an artist, musician, or storytelle­r these days; anyone can produce, express, and even garner an audience.

But what’s the point?

What ultimately limits a culture of limitless selfexpres­sion is meaningles­sness. That’s why we continue to see the epidemics of narcissism, loneliness, addiction, depression and self-harm. It’s as if we are a roomful of kids who each brought something for show-and-tell, but we can’t stop talking long enough to appreciate what anyone else has to offer.

Dallas Willard once quipped that no one stands on the edge of the Grand Canyon and shouts, “I am awesome.” Today, however, plenty of people stand on the edge of something wonderful, in a world full of God-given wonder, but cannot look outside themselves long enough to figure out that it’s really not about us. In our world of constructe­d selves, imaginary gods and purposeles­sness, the true imaginatio­n withers and dies.

C.S. Lewis understood what is required to shape the imaginatio­n. “In reading great literature, I become a thousand men and yet remain myself. The man who is contented to be only himself, and therefore less a self, is in prison.” In the works of Spenser, Milton and George MacDonald, Lewis sensed a true grappling with what he called “the roughness and density of life.” Those authors could account for things like personhood, good, evil, purpose and meaning. By contrast, atheists like Shaw, Wells and Mills seemed surprising­ly thin to Lewis.

Faced with “a desire nothing on Earth could satisfy,” Lewis concluded he was made for another, better world. His imaginatio­n, he said, was baptized before his full conversion.

A revival of Christian imaginatio­n is desperatel­y needed today. Not only because the next C.S. Lewis could be out there, waiting for the kind of beauty and artistry that might baptize his or her own imaginatio­n, but also because imaginatio­n points to a vital aspect of what it means to be human. Only humans mirror the Creator in this way, with the ability to imagine what is not there and make it so. God, of course, created the world ex nihilo, out of nothing. We don’t have that kind of power, but we do have the capacity to create, and our words, too, are profoundly powerful.

Jesus, the second Adam, appealed to the imaginatio­n in his words, his compassion and by telling stories. He is the perfect expression of the proper role that imaginatio­n should have in our hearts and minds. In him, we see that imaginatio­n is one of God’s richest gifts to humanity: a gift that can help us make sense of life, move us to compassion and bring what is not, but ought to be, into reality.

From Breakpoint, March 25, 2024 (originally released Dec. 6, 2021); reprinted by permission of the Colson Center, breakpoint.org.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States