July Journal, Sixth Sunday after Trinity

Ah, the power of the novelist!

I spent some time this last week writing the seventh chapter of my novel, The Music of the Mountain. My four characters (Molly Macrae, Winston Adams, Fr. Thomas Adams, and Dr. Patricia Norton) are currently in the basement of our student residence in Berkeley. What are they doing? Sorting books, of course. What else?

The setting is post pandemic and lockdowns (January, 2023), and the residence and chapel have been closed due to riots and vandalism and fires. The Berkeley DEI Squad (Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion) has raided the upstairs library shelves and burned the “racist” white men’s studies of theology, ecclesiology, and history, not to mention music binders, literature classics, and much more, all titles on their list, with echoes of Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451. Bibles and prayer books were at the top, naturally.

And so, in the dim light of the condemned building’s basement, my characters pack books in boxes to hide in a safer place than Berkeley. In the dim light, they work in pairs, and get to know one another as they work.

Many of my novels feature books and booklists and authors and libraries, for they offer a rich source of ideas about the human condition. Who are we? Why are we? Where are we? How and what are we? The refrain is constant today, as statues topple and schools are renamed, as fear locks down thought, as the virus of Communism blows through our towns, our schools, our homes, infecting hearts and minds. (But not souls.)

Christians are reminded to “be not afraid” and “fear not.” For fear paralyzes body and mind. One must ask, “Why are we told to be afraid?” “Why are we told to hide in our homes, isolate?” “Why are we told to silence our children with smart screens and propaganda?”

And so in my little novel I have gathered a band of revolutionaries (of stout heart) who are dedicated to the revolutionary proposition that all men are created equal and endowed by their creator with certain inalienable rights. My little group has suffered at the hands of the fearmongers. They have been silenced and punished by losing their jobs; they are going to act in the name of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.

For the conservatives are now the revolutionaries, according to many. It is an odd place to be, one that causes acute discomfort, like shoes that don’t fit. Conservatives are not, by definition, proponents of change. They conserve the good, the true, and the beautiful. But it appears that the Left has taken control of the nation (major institutions) which makes the Right the protestors, those with the barricades and flags. Alas. We really just want peace, freedom, and the pursuit of happiness. Simple stuff?

Yes, peace and freedom, the old rallying cry of Berkeley’s anti-war demonstrators in the Vietnam days has become the cry of my four characters – quiet, thoughtful folks who would simply like to read their books in a comfortable corner with a good light. So my characters don’t really cry out. They don’t really march (not yet) although there is a March for Life event coming soon. They don’t wave flags, unless you count the stars and stripes. No barricades either. And they wait politely for others to invite them in through open doors (January 6, 2020).

They represent the millions in this country who want to be peacefully free to worship their God of love, marry their prince or princess, give life to many babies, and teach their children to be virtuous citizens. They don’t want the State to kidnap their children, to control their minds or carve their bodies.

And so this last week my heroes and heroines spent time together breathing the dust of moldy volumes, stacked randomly in piles and double metal shelves. They will soon discover other miracles in this (barricaded!) basement – a large American flag hiding in a corner, chalices and patens, vestments, incense, candles, and tarnished candlesticks. Prayer books! Bibles! Treasonous materials! They hear mice scurrying in the walls and water drips from exposed pipes in this cold stormy month of January 2023. They are bold and brave, and they want to talk about what they read recently.

They have heard there is a mountain to the east – Angel Mountain – where a hermit once lived. They have heard there are caves suitable to bury the last, lost library of Western Civilization.

But in the meantime, they must act quickly and quietly to save the hard copies that they can find. The Internet libraries have been cleansed of so-called hate speech. It is time for them to act. For they know that without history, without words, without memory, without these exercises of the mind, a people cannot survive. Without books and words and literacy, we become slaves to the tribal chief who commands the most power. In many ways we are already there.

Several generations have become drugged with moving images on screens, unable to memorize or learn, incapable of debating ideas respectfully. It was prophesied in the ‘nineties, when higher education dropped Western Civilization as a requirement to graduate, that our people, our singular culture of freedom, would become unmoored. But the dumbing down gained momentum with the Internet and with the easy entertainment found in a handheld device called a phone.

It appears that I am writing the story as I go… so am quite interested in how it all turns out. No plot spoiler here (!): I have no idea. I listen and watch and pray. I think one of the characters should undergo an NDE (Near-Death Experience). But which one? I’m leaning toward Dr. Norton, the agnostic (atheist?) Professor of Philosophy and Ethics.

Ah, the power of the novelist!

One response to “July Journal, Sixth Sunday after Trinity

  1. Monique Robles's avatar Monique Robles

    Christine, this is powerful!

    You express so vividly what is happening. My heart was racing a bit as I read the story you are telling in this upcoming novel … our story.

    So many people seem to walk around like zombies with no clue of the “camp” they are being herded into.

    I’m grateful for people like you who are helping to preserve our history.

    May God bless you and your words. In Him, Monique

    Monique Robles, MD, MS Bioethics Pediatric Critical Care Physician, Bioethicist, Writer http://www.humandignityspeaks.comhttp://www.humandignityspeaks.com/ ________________________________

    Liked by 1 person

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