God liked war, generally speaking, but especially war
against Allah, his arch-enemy (or alter-ego). God liked
pictures of clouds parted by sunlight, printed with Bible
verses. God liked donuts and donut holes, Pastor Ron,
Pastor Lee. God liked clean knock-knock jokes told after
the prayer while his people lined up before steaming,
unrecognizable casserole dishes and supernatural
amounts of Jell-O in church basement fellowship halls
where mothers hissed at their squirming children
to try at least a little bit of the green bean and carrot
and raisin dish or no dessert and go to bed early,
and who knows, maybe the Rapture happens tonight
and you get left behind. Otherwise, God hated swear
words, body piercings, homos, clinics, electric guitars,
sex, bad breath, closed doors, constructive criticism, free
will. Most of all, though, God hated Satan, because
Satan was too much like the local high school cross
country coach, with his crew cut and one gold-capped
tooth that glimmered when he opened his mouth
in his high-pitched devil screech, after taking his first two
fingers and thumb for a quick grope and fondle against
the frontal wad in his spandex shorts. Satan was smart,
too, and could sometimes trick God into buying into
his pyramid scheme, making God look like a dumb God
among the other, neighborhood gods, and so that was why
God sent his son—a god slash human hybrid of some
sort—to provide mediation. Eventually certain people
took issue with God’s son, most particularly for his only
begotten sense of entitlement and for what they claimed
was an inflated notion of how he had helped rearrange
the spiritual order of the cosmos, and convinced some others
to kill him—end of story, one would think, but it was
not. After they killed his son—nailed him, in fact, in furious
bursts of rage to a Wyoming fence post—we were told that
we all had done it, guilty by association. Oops, apologies—
how can we make this right? God was silent, still grieving,
apparently, but from others, namely Pastor Ron and
Pastor Lee, we learned that all God wanted was for us
to invite this son into our hearts. Like, we wondered,
to actually live there? Although we wished to point out
that besides being weird, really—forgive the language—
fucking psycho, so shamed at how low we had seen those
among us go to vouch for our own debasement, we agreed;
from now on we would play the part of the good sons
and daughters that we knew we were not, nor would ever be.
Tag Archives: spirituality
189. God had been Reading Augustine
God had been reading Augustine. God wept over Augustine’s Confessions, as we all did, and then he wondered where his place would be in Augustine’s Civitas Dei, City of God. We had no clue. We thought maybe somewhere on the central throne, if there would be such a thing, but God didn’t like that. He wanted a big temple, a temple bigger than the City of God, in fact, a temple that might even house the City of God.
The problem was that God was not very clear. He wanted at times too much. He wanted and then he didn’t want. He wanted gold, gaudy, precious stones, at first. He wanted a lot of light, modern, many windows. No hard lines. And then he wanted homey, dark, log cabin-ish. He fired our best architects. He ripped up blueprints and stormed, he stormed, until, finally frustrated, he went away from us for good, leaving us looking up into the blank sky, blue as it sometimes was, and is still, or otherwise full of a possibly carcinogenic brownish smog.
We of course hope that God’s found what he’s long been looking for, wherever he is, in whatever city he’s found himself in. Even if not the City of God, it may well be the City of Angels.
There have been stranger things reportedly seen here. Why not God?
On certain early evenings like this one, for example, not to sound too ridiculous, but yes, when the sunlight through this window sits even if momentarily on the sides of our faces; and old Van Morrison comes over the house speakers—not “Brown Eyed Girl,” to be sure, but perhaps “Moondance” or “Crazy Love”; and our buzzes are so buzzy, so hoppy, so IPA and perfect, we can almost feel him again. We can almost feel God wanting to almost reach out for us, Michelangelo style, Sistine Chapel, and, at times like this, it is almost enough.
159. It Sounds Like It could be a Love Song
This morning when I was reading my Bible—First Thessalonians, verse three of chapter four, to be exact—I received a pocket dial (what is sometimes known more crudely as a butt dial) from Satan. It was six or seven minutes of mostly garbled nonsense. With a name like Asher, I was likely at the top of his list of contacts. I could not make out very many lines. But what I could make out made me most curious, to say the least.
In one instance, Satan said, “It sounds like it could be a love song,” followed by some mumbling, as previously mentioned, and not much else, except these ghostly background screams in chamber reverb. Also, Satan’s voice was higher than I had expected, but otherwise, that was it.
I forgot about it, basically, and lived in the way I had mostly been living, for the rest of my life, for four-and-a-half more decades, to be exact. When I finally died, I found myself looking into Satan’s face. He is much more handsome than is commonly depicted. He then asked me if I had gotten the call. I said that I had, but that I had heard it as being a mistake.
“There are no mistakes,” Satan said. Again, his voice was exceptionally high, quite piercing actually.
“But then tell me,” I said. “What sounds like it could be a love song? Was it my life? Was it supposed to have sounded like a love song?”
But he didn’t answer.
“Are you saying that my life sounded as if it could have started to move into a love song? And if so, where did I go wrong so that it turned into a ballad, or whatever it ended up being, that country-slash-folk-slash-rap-slash-death metal thing?”
But again, no answer.
“Is it possible,” I said, “that if only I had learned to follow the formula—the forty-second verse into first chorus, second verse into bridge and then double-chorus, half-verse and outro—my life would have likely turned into a love song?”
No answer.
“What could I have done?”
No answer.
“Please. At least you can tell me. Is there something I did wrong?”
No answer.
“Are you saying that if only I’d learned to go against my nature so as to be more attentive and less selfish and more available and more, generally, light-hearted and easy-going and not so unpredictably and episodically crazy that my life could have—would have—started to sound like a love song?”
And thus goes my hell.
115. My Dog Paul
My dog Paul was twitching beside my chair in his sleep, and I knew what that meant. The bad dreams had returned. A few months earlier, I went to a pet psychic to try to determine exactly what these bad dreams were about. It had gotten so bad at that point that I’d wake to find Paul hovering over my body, growling at me in his sleep. After I slapped his muzzle to wake him up, he would lick my hand, at once embarrassed and ashamed.
I learned from the pet psychic that several lifetimes earlier Paul had been the head Buddhist monk in a Tibetan monastery, and I his loyal and faithful servant. Aside from my duties as some sort of glorified gong-sounder at the approach of prayer time, I massaged the head monk’s neck with aromatic oils. I fed him water from a bamboo cup when he was fasting, applied the strong-smelling eastern remedies to his limbs to help the blood circulate, and took him for walks in his rickshaw while he swatted at himself with his fly wand. These were only some of my many, daily tasks, and I performed them happily, with only the thought of nirvana.
I also had my secret name for the head monk. The pet psychic was reluctant to tell me this until I plied her with another twenty dollars. I called him Vagina Mouth, apparently, in the language of whatever Tibetan people speak. He had been silent for as long as the other monks had known him, for over thirty years, and perhaps Vagina Mouth was my attempt at some sort of clever wordplay.
Only during my next visit with the pet psychic did another possibility arise for the nickname. In this session, I learned of my secret “oral explorations” with the monk. That’s how the psychic phrased it, anyway: “oral explorations.” All the while, she had Paul under hypnosis. He lay still on the couch as if dead.
One afternoon during prayer time, the head monk broke his vow of silence to whisper, “Peat moss”—a most strange thing to say. Even when hearing it now, it sounds strange, and I understand what it basically means. But being as our community of monks lived on top of a mountain, we knew nothing then of peat moss or even of these places called bogs in the first place. We had a hundred words for prayer and snow and chanting and enlightenment, but not one practical word to explain this strange noun. At least we suspected it to be a noun, although we couldn’t, of course, be sure.
The head monk went into another period of extended silence. How long he would remain with his lips closed, it was difficult to tell. But his revelation troubled us. We could not find the definition of peat moss in our library of scrolls that predated history. We consulted the I Ching and came up empty there as well. We painted mandalas in an effort to help rebalance our community after the arrival of this potentially threatening word. We fasted for weeks and fondled our prayer beads incessantly, but nothing helped. One monk went crazy and began eating his feces. Another monk was caught sleeping with the goats. Something had to be done.
The other monks came up with a plan. What this plan was, the psychic could not tell. It is possible that the plan itself had never been put into action. Whatever the case, what came in very clear for the psychic was how a monk on a meditative walk one spring afternoon, discovered the head monk and I rocking the rickshaw in a cave along the mountain path leading to the monastery.
Our sin was reported to a tribunal of monks who, after a long period of discussion and prayer, reached a decision. If Paul broke his vow of silence to tell the community what he had meant by peat moss, both of our lives would be spared. Paul silently accepted his guilty plea with one sad shake of his head. Both of us were later bound together as I screamed at him to talk to them, to try to reason, to open his goddamned mouth. But it was too late. They put us into his rickshaw, set the rickshaw on fire, and pushed us off a mountain slope.
Give or take a few minor details, this basically brings us to the strange happenings of this afternoon. After waking him from his bad dreams, I said, “Do you want to go for a walk, Paul?” He barked that he did and, once outside, began taking us in a direction that I was not used to going.
Rather than reining him in with a stern word as I might have done on any other afternoon, I allowed Paul the belief that he was leading the way. He came to a house that I had never been to before. He parked himself on the sidewalk in front of the house and would not budge for as hard as I pulled on his leash.
“What is it, Paul? You want me to go up to the door? Is that it?”
Paul wagged his tail.
“Fine,” I said and walked up the pathway to knock on the door. I waited a few moments and looked back at Paul as if to say, There, are you happy?
I turned to go when the psychic herself answered the door, wearing a GAP sweatshirt, her hair all staticky and mashed down on one side, as if I’d woken her from a deep nap. “What are you doing here?” she said.
I looked back at Paul. He barked. I turned back to the psychic.
Again, she asked me, “What are you doing here? And how did you find my address?”
But I could not say, and so I said nothing at all.