Baby Beatniks Seek Truth Too
And now I've started questioningIf anything is true...
Christopher Newton (1966)
All I want is the truth
Just give me some truth.
John Lennon
In my distress I cry to the Lord,
that he may answer me:
'Deliver me, O Lord,
from lying lips,
from a deceitful tongue.'
Psalm 120
I'm afraid I'm making my Christian readers a little nervous here. Believe me, I am not turning my back on Jesus Christ. I am saying there was nothing in the brand of Christianity that I was served up at the age of sixteen, with its tender ritual and mindless rote prayer and comfortable satisfaction with the status quo, that could hold me.
And second, to those who say why don't I forget about the past and just forge on ahead, I say "Forget about it? Forget about it!". My mind teems with these images and memories. I am convinced that what I saw and felt and heard is as eternally important as that snowshoe bunny over there running down the glacier. I hope that's clear. OK?
Now, meanwhile, back in 1959...
I wanted God in my life. I longed for Him/Her/It. But, near as I could tell, the Biblical God was not really God. For instance, I read Psalm 18 about God riding down to earth on his thundercloud with smoke coming out of his nostrils - well, what God is this? Did he create the entire universe and now is riding around shooting lightning out of a thundercloud in the hill country of Israel? How could anybody take this stuff seriously? That's how I felt. I'm just being honest, okay? At seventeen, this was an issue about truth for me. And it's still a valid, if sophomoric, question. Especially if you are presenting a struggling truth-seeker with a fundamentalist, every word is literally true, belief about the Book and how it works.
In a world that was full of lies and deception coming at me from every corner like arrows whizzing by - which is how I and every truth-seeker has to feel, why should I believe your version of the truth just because you say it is the real one? Coca-Cola is the real thing too, according to them.
The book Dharma Bums, which I've been blogging about the last few days, presented me with another option - seeking God through direct experience of him. I don't have a copy of the book at the moment - lost or given away in my many years of wandering - but in memory at least, the book is about three guys searching for God, and God is Truth. Simplistically, that's what Dharma means. In one episode of the book Jack and Gary Snyder (under novelistic pseudonyms) go on a crazy mountain climbing quest in the Sierras. Even at seventeen I could see climbing the mountain was really about two things -- first, going on a totally great adventure with great wild friends , and second, about getting higher - higher into the pure truth and out of the smog of the world's stupidity. A direct experience. An enlightenment. Real proof because it happened to you!
That's what it still comes down to, guys and girls, truth is true if it happened to you. (For a modernist, I'm quite a good post-modernist). I know God is real. Not because of anything in the Bible, but because I saw him. The Bible fills in the picture because it's about other guys who saw him.
And there are other scenes in Dharma Bums where Jack (I think this is in Dharma Bums - but maybe it's On The Road or Subterraneans) is sitting in a library in the Santa Clara Valley day after day surrounded by the spring cherry orchards and reading the Diamond Sutra. I didn't know what that was, but it seemed to be some kind of teaching where you didn't have to belief in all of these stories about God riding around on his thundercloud. He was --Something Else. Unknowable. Ineffable. Something beyond understanding. Both personal and impersonal. Encompassing everything. Wow! I felt that must be the way God really is. Big.
Where was someone who could have shown me the Christian Way in its adventure and power and truth? Who was there to show me Jesus Christ in His awesome complexity?
I didn't hear you knockin'. In fact, in all those long years from 1959 to 1968, when I encountered my first Jesus Freak, there was not one soul who defended or even spoke to me of the Christian faith with a fair understanding or true commitment. If I didn't ask - well, who would I ask?
OK, that's a fair question. Let's see. At San Francisco State a few years later there was the Campus Crusade for Christ. They had a regular table outside the Student Commons, handing out tracts and stuff. At the next table over there was another group called the Young Americans For Freedom. They espoused every right-wing conservative position available in the early Sixties, from going into Viet Nam to stop the Communists to getting arch-conservative Barry Goldwater elected president. (Man, Goldwater's looking pretty good these days! He was a man of honor.) Members of both organizations wore the same short sleeve white shirts and skinny black ties, crew cuts and they carried the same kind of bookbags. I wasn't sure, and didn't think about it much, but I figured maybe they were both part of the same organization. They both looked like The Enemy. I couldn't see much difference between them, except they both wanted me to believe things that weren't true.
I don't remember ever being "witnessed to" by a Campus Crusade guy but if I had been, you know what I would have said? "The only thing I want to be saved from is having to spend eternity with guys like you! How dare you try to "save me," whatever that means. You know nothing of the pain I suffer. You haven't earned the right! Go away!"
No preaching, no witnessing, no handing out of tracts would have had the slightest effect on me. If they pointed out some eternal truth from The Bible, I could counter with an eternal truth from Bambi. They were both just books!
You know who I might have listened to? A Christian girl I was in love with. If she spoke earnestly and I could see through her life that it was true, then I would have given Jesus a fair shot.
Second best would be if I heard about Jesus from another freak. Someone I trusted would speak truth to me about his own experience. Someone I respected. Not some preacher dressed up in hippie clothes, but one of my close friends.
I wish I had known about a secret house church of dirty underground beatniks who were at war against the Great Society of lies and malice for all. In other words, people who were really following Jesus. I would have gone there in a New York minute.
Now that I think about, I STILL want to go to that church!
Labels: Baby Beatniks, Childhood in San Francisco, Meaning of Things, Psalms, San Francisco, San Francisco State

8 Comments:
So, people getting nervous eh? Love it!
I was going to try to stand on my head and read Lamentations, but my gut flopped down and smothered me...yoiks! I'll stick to twirling...
I've had my share of bros and sis' wondering "how ya doin?" Usually stems from moments spent audibly wondering IF Jesus IS. It would seem that a Christian is NEVER allowed to appear to doubt. That is, question what he beleives and why. I've thrown a few things out there in conversation that have made many people "stumble" and wonder with worry about their own beliefs, or become suspect of mine. (Jesus is NOT white) I must learn to be more sensitive towards fragile Christians.
Truth is, the more we investigate this faith of ours, question it, the better chance the truth has, to cement itself in our thinking and grow in our hearts.
Jesus asked Papa a few times about stuff, why can't we?
End of sermon. For a transcript, send $174 to Focus...
Yup. Jesus asked. God turned his back on his only son. King David lamented and cried,wondered where God was, the original blues I suspect.
How would you write tunes for THAT song??
It's been done.It starts in Genesis. Bob Dylan, at least. Highway 61:
Oh God said to Abraham, "Kill me a son"
Abe says, "Man, you must be puttin' me on"
God say, "No." Abe say, "What?"
God say, "You can do what you want Abe, but
The next time you see me comin' you better run"
Well Abe says, "Where do you want this killin' done?"
God says, "Out on Highway 61."
How do we try and explain that? Where's the righteous justification? God says kill your son? I couldn't do it, probably wouldn't do it. I'd be willing to chance the result rather than sacrifice my son. Not because of me, but because of him.
Yeah, God's the boss, the be-all and end-all. But to kill your son? That's the ultimate stretch. I have 4 sons and each is so dear that I'd die for all or each of them, as well as my two daughters and a couple of dear friends.
As much as I love God and Jesus and the Holy Spirit, I can't understand that spirit of sacrifice. Again, not because of me but because of them.
I guess God did it, so that should be good enough for me. But, it's not, not for me.
God expects us to question him, I think. I have no scriptural proof of that besides Abraham and Moses and Job and David and Isaiah and Daniel and, yes, Jesus. I guess if we question him, we're in really good company.
The best "God-teacher" that i ever had made me very uncomfortable. During almost every Bible study he led and talk he gave I distinctly got the feeling that I was being hung up by my heels, my brains turned to jelly and shook up and my assumptions dumped out of my pockets like change. It was great! One could never figure out what he really thought or believed, which I think made a number of people very nervous. I'm sure some people in his own circle of friends knew what he really thought, but as for us, he wanted us to stop thinking about what he thought and would rather churn us up and challenge us on everything. Man, if only more Christian teachers would do that!
What a bunch of wild thinkers hang out at The Pigsty. I'll just keep pouring the tea.
In that story about Abraham, of course God had no intention of having Abraham actually sacrifice his son. He just wondered if he would be that obedient. He was "being tested" as the Christians say. Like you, Leo, I would have jumped up and down shaking my fist at God and shouting No Way, Jose! I could never be that obedient -- God wouldn't like it. I "know" God's character and he is against sacrificing children. Period. I think the story is there to puzzle us forever.
K. I dumped my childhood religion, and here's why. God was loving, but powerless. I had to follow a strict set of rules so I wouldn't end up actually sinning. I couldn't go to the movies because people might think I was watching a BAD movie. I couldn't dance because it might lead to drinking or sex. I couldn't have a drink because I would have more than one and get drunk...and have sex. God was powerless to stop me. All He could do was sit up in Heaven and watch me, and go "Tsk, tsk, tsk."
When I left home for college, it became very apparent to me that if God was powerless, I wanted nothing to do with Him. I quit going to church and began exploring, through experience, what was true and what wasn't. I doubted everything I had ever been told, I tested everything.
Anything less would have been a cop-out. Mr. Pig, we could obviously have some great discussions about this!
A really wise ancient beatnik once said "there's nothing new under the sun..." and your blog and comments attest to it. Pain, death, love and joy - they are out there for every generation to experience. Some of comes free, some we pay for with stupidity, pride, by being in the wrong place-wrong time and it's not your fault stuff or plain old "growing up." All of which should give us oldies the grace to be understanding and gentle with the wild crazy kids who cross our paths and make us nervous or break our hearts - or worst of all, judgemental. We were just like them (or worse!)Some of us survived and some went off the deep end and Jesus loved us all, kept calling, kept coaxing, kept sending angels in disquise, hoping we'd listen, even a tiny bit. Maybe some of us will be the lights in the darkness and pain for the current sufferers/seekers, in a way that touches them "for real."
Patrushka
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