Usually, books that address such questions as Why does God allow suffering and Why does God hide Himself are preachy and heavy. See, you are already bored with it, right? This is true whether the books are Christian (or Jewish or Muslim), or atheistic, such as the books by Richard Dawkins or Sam Harris. These books all have their place.
But in the recently published novel Glass Cathedral, Stan Rice uses humor to explore these questions. It takes the form of a three-way banter among an evangelical Christian (Emilio), an atheist (Dan), and a Christian who has recently had her faith severely shaken (Misty). They more or less agree that the problems would be solved if God would just appear in the sky and explain Himself.
Or not. Would this make any difference?
This is the author’s summary from Amazon:
The newspaper staff writers of a small desert
town assume the strange light in the sky is merely sunlight refracted by ice
crystals: atheist Dan Hardy; the spiritually-searching Misty Barbour; and even
the confirmed Christian editor Emilio Villanueva. Then the light turns out to
be God—maybe. This is enough to make Misty leave her doubts behind and marry
Emilio. Dan, who was hoping to win Misty’s affection, is skeptical, especially
since God showed up on no photographic images, and everyone in town saw God differently.
The government authorities declare the light was a mass hallucination.
Emilio and Misty raise money to build a glass cathedral in the desert, near the
place they think God appeared. When thousands of people come for the inaugural
celebration, a storm pulls the glasshouse into the sky. Misty gets trampled. At
the end, Emilio and Misty, who is now disabled, conclude that God’s work is to
help people, not to build a cathedral, and even Dan agrees.
The setting is that a bright light appears in the sky in the eastern California desert near the town of Susurrus. Dan assumes it is a natural phenomenon. Misty doesn’t care. Even Emilio does not suspect the light is, in fact, God appearing in the sky. God appears only in Susurrus, appears differently to each observer, and refuses to answer questions. But Emilio considers it a vindication of his faith, and Misty is convinced and marries Emilio. Dan, and all the civil and military authorities, consider every possible physical explanation. Meanwhile, Emilio and Misty decide to start a ministry to tell the world that God appeared in the sky in the desert.
As part one of the novel (The Susurrus Event) ends, Emilio and Misty have to confront the fact that their message is not, in fact, a fundamentalist Christian one. There is a part of the gospels in which Jesus says, if your hand causes you to sin, cut it off. If your eye causes you to sin, pluck it out. You can find this in Matthew 5: 29-30. Emilio and Misty flee from a fundamentalist church that does precisely this: plucking out their eyes and chopping off their hands.
There is hardly a page without humor. For example, a heavenly chord fills the sky when God appears. But it is not what humans would consider a beautiful chord. As a matter of fact, it sounds “as if a cosmic butt had seated itself upon the celestial organ keyboard and unstopped every note.”
These discussions and events do not take place on blank slates. Both Dan and Misty have life experiences that strongly determine their reactions to these events, and to one another. That is what my next essay will be about.



