Does Pain Last Forever?
In
my last entry, I wrote that there is a fine line between an
archetype and a cliché. Well, this episode is just one big old
string of clichés. There's the "save the children from the evil
headmaster" theme. There's the "love triangle,"
fancied up into a love rectangle, if you know what I mean. There's
the "temptation of ultimate power used for ultimate good"
idea, with a good bit of "You shall be like gods" tacked on
for good measure. . There's the "You really had other women
before me?" surprise. There's the "You left me without
saying goodbye" heartbreaker. There's the "I'm immortal and
will outlive everyone I love" theme, which is a double
heartbreaker. And finally, there's the old solution to the Problem of
Evil, which is that all of our imperfections, pains, and sufferings
really make us who we are; we wouldn't be who we are without the pain
of our past.
And
in spite of its being such a string of chestnuts, it works. It still
tugs at the heartstrings. Well, mine anyway. That's probably because
David Tennant is such a good actor, and the other aren't too shabby
either.
But
it puts me in another theological conundrum. Sorry, when I set out to
do "cultural critique" of the series, I didn't mean to get
all doctrinal in every entry. I guess that's just the default way my
mind works. I'm sure I'll have other ideas as we go along, but here's
what I've got for now.
Sarah
Jane Smith persuades the Doctor to refuse ultimate power. He is
tempted to accept an offer that would allow him to go back in time
and prevent the war that killed all of his people, thus saving the
lives of his entire species. Sarah Jane stops him by saying, “Pain
and loss: they define us as much as happiness of love. Whether it's
the world, or a relationship, everything has its time, and everything
ends.” This is certainly true in our temporal realm. Our griefs
become part of us; our heartbreak blends into the shape of our
character. But it is true universally, eternally? The Doctor seemed
to think so. He gave in to the inevitability, turned away from the
power offered to him, broke Sarah Jane's heart again, and set Rose up
for future heartbreak. Again, and again, and again.
If
change, pain, loss, endings, and heartbreaks are necessary to being
human, how could Heaven be possible? The promise of Heaven is a place
without tears. We are never told it is a place without change, so
that is one possibility: there, we will develop eternally, changing,
growing, blossoming, learning. But we have faith that we will never
lose anyone there. That we will never have our hearts broken. That we
will never have to say goodbye to so much as a tin dog that we love.
Does that mean we will stop being human?
Perhaps
not. Here is an idea. Perhaps our pain, grief, and loss will go on
into Heaven. They are part of us, and it is we
who are redeemed, not some shadow of ourselves. Maybe there will even
be some kind of sorrow that is eternally redeemed on through our
heavenly existence, in a vital, evolving, real life. There seems to
be the tiniest bit of Biblical evidence for that: Christ's scars were
visible on His resurrected body. In Revelation He appears as a Lamb
“looking like it had been slain.” If even His pain goes on into
eternity, I imagine ours will, too. So perhaps Sarah Jane was right.
Maybe pain and loss define us as much as happiness and love.
Here's
a poem I wrote on this subject ages ago; it appears in my collection
Caduceus.
Christ
endured through three dark kinds of death:
His
body, cold; His spirit, tormented;
His
two-fold nature, from the Trinity,
somehow
divided, lonely. There, the shade-as-
fire
flaming dim unquenched Him; ashed-
thick-air
untarnished Him, though plunged in Hades.
For
harrowing [I wonder] He alone went
wandering:
exquisite pains eternal
wracked
Him, packed in one three-day atonement
through
His Father’s solitude infernal.
He
wears His wounds forever from that war-
fare,
bears His glory in the beauty of His scars.
1 comment:
I'm so pleased you're doing this. Every post has been excellent. I'm still heartbroken you aren't starting with the first season.
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