Friday, April 23, 2010

Stephen King Talks Dark Christianity And The Stand

I ran across a post about Stephen King's The Stand and the Marvel comic book / graphic novel version of the book. I never read anywhere until now about it's ties to Christianity and the end times beliefs, but it seemed pretty obvious to me that it was heavily influenced by Revelations and the story of Moses, etc. Well, a couple of years back Stephen King actually did an interview speaking very candidly about the inspiration for The Stand and some of his own beliefs. It's very interesting stuff. He calls The Stand a work of "Dark Christianity." The interview was done with him back in 2008 for the 30th anniversary of the celebrated novel. Check out a little of what he had to say:

"Salon.com: In the introduction to the expanded edition of "The Stand," you also called the novel a work of "dark Christianity." What did you mean by that?

Stephen King: I was raised Christian, and I was raised to believe in the idea of the Antichrist. My wife said that -- she was raised a Catholic -- the attitude of the Catholic Church is, give them to me when they're young, and they'll be mine forever. It isn't really true. A lot of us grow up and we grow out of the literal interpretation that we get when we're children, but we bear the scars all our life. Whether they're scars of beauty or scars of ugliness, it's pretty much in the eye of the beholder.

I'm interested in the concepts. I'm particularly interested in the idea that in the New Testament, you're suggesting a moral code that's actually enlightened. Basically what Christ preached: get along with your neighbor and give everything away and follow me. So we're talking pretty much about communism or socialism, all the things that the good Christian Republicans in the House of Representatives today are railing about in light of this bailout bill. Of course, Christ never preached give away everything to Wall Street, so they might have a point.

I was able to use all those things in "The Stand." It's an effort to say, let's give God his due here. Too often, in novels that are speculative, God is a kind of kryptonite, and that's about all that it is, and it goes back to Dracula, where someone dumps a crucifix in Count Dracula's face, and he pulls away and runs back into his house. That's not religion. That's some kind of juju, like a talisman. I wanted to do more than that. I wanted to explore what that means to be able to rise above adversity by faith, because it's something most of us do every day. We may not call it Christianity. I wanted to do that. I wanted it to be a God trip.

Salon.com: Running throughout your body of work, there is this thread, a running internal argument about God. I'm thinking, in particular, of the story "Ayana" in the new collection.

Stephen King: It's a mystery. That's the first thing that interests me about the idea of God. If there is one, it's mysterious and powerful and awesome to even consider the concept, and you have to take it seriously. I understand where Bill Maher is coming from when he says, basically, the world is destroying itself over a bunch of fairy tales about talking snakes and men who are alive inside fishes. I'm very sympathetic to it, but at the same time, given the cosmos that we're living in, it's very persuasive, the idea that there is some kind of first cause that's running things. It might not be the god of Jerry Jenkins and Tim LaHaye, it might not be the god of al-Qaida, and it might not be the god of Abraham, but something very well could be running things. The order of the universe as we see it, the interlocking nature, and the way things work together, are persuasive of the idea that there may be some overarching first cause.

The other thing that's interested me ever since I was a kid was the idea that's baldly articulated in "Desperation," and that is that God is cruel. I always in my mind equated Mother Abagail with Moses, and the story of Moses taking credit for the water coming from the rock and being forbidden to get to the Promised Land because of that one thing, that one slip, where God is cruel, and I wanted to use those things and say two things. First, that the myths are difficult and suggest a difficult moral path through life, and second, that they are ultimately more fruitful and more earth-friendly than the god of technology, the god of the microchip, the god of the cellphone."

If you're interested, he even talks about his belief of the afterlife and goes in to other topics. You can read the whole article right here. Now, I'm not saying that I hold his opinions and beliefs up as fact. There are things he believes that I am absolutely not condoning, I just find it interesting to hear a man of the stature of Stephen King talk openly about Christianity and his beliefs.

You can buy the book here.

You can buy the graphic novel here and here.

You can buy the movie right here.