The Life and Times of…uh…God
Author Jack Miles'
Pulitzer Prize winning biography is just divine.
By Paul Johnson
Reprinted from COMMENTARY 100:1, July 1995.
No summary of mine can do justice to the richness of God:
A Biography. Jack Miles, a journalist and former Jesuit who holds a doctorate
in Near Eastern languages from Harvard, has conceived the idea—which may not be
entirely new but has never before been pursued with such thoroughness—of treating
the God of the Bible as a literary character. In his pages, God emerges as a
complex and ever changing personality, the hero of the greatest work of
literature in mankind's history, created over hundreds of years by different
artists of varying skills.
It is Miles' argument that God changes profoundly in the
course of the Bible. The interest of his work—rather, one of its many
interests—lies in his exploration of how and why. In a sense, he writes, God
ages, like the earth He creates and the human race He designs to possess it.
We see Him first as an immensely energetic being,
"as the creator, outside history, prior to it, masterfully setting in
motion the heavenly bodies by which historical time will be measured."
This is, as it were, a young, adventurous, innovative, and highly imaginative
God, hopeful and dynamic, relishing His power to create and design, a muscular
God—muscular in mind as well as body—fit for a pictorial epic by Michelangelo.
But if that is the God of the beginning, by the end of the Bible we see God as
the "ancient of days," white-haired and silent, "looking forward
to the end of history from a remote and cloudy throne"—a William Blake
sort of God.
In tracing the ages of God, Miles
notes carefully the patterns of His speech. At the very beginning of Genesis,
God is so talkative He talks to Himself, for there is no other living thing to
hear Him. At other times in the early sections of the Bible, He says a great
deal both to Himself and to men. Then comes a gradual decline into silence, a
growing taciturnity of which the Book of Job is an important landmark;
thereafter, God's speeches are merely recapitulated.
One of the reasons for this
growing silence, Miles thinks, is a desire on God's part to become more
mysterious. The early, loquacious God is at some pains to reveal Himself. He
creates man in His own image precisely so that man may know and understand what
monotheism is all about. It is as though God were anxious to talk man through
the divine plan, instructing him on how to give satisfaction to his Maker. This
early God, remarks Miles, "rarely says of Himself that He is mysterious
and more than once implies the opposite." In Deuteronomy, for example, He
insists with some asperity that what He tells His people to do is perfectly
plain:
"Surely this instruction
which I enjoin upon you this day is not too baffling for you, nor is it beyond
reach. It is not in the heavens that you should say, 'Who among us can go up to
the heavens and get it for us and impart it to us, that we may observe it?'
[Deuteronomy 30:11‑12]"
Later, however, an increasingly silent God deliberately
surrounds Himself in mystery. Indeed, the emergence of the God who is part
mystery carries beyond the end of the Hebrew Bible and is a critical aspect of
early Christianity.
Since the mystery element is much
more important in Christian than in Jewish theology, it is ironic, Miles
observes, that we see the growth of taciturnity and mystery in God more clearly
in the traditional Jewish ordering of the books of the Bible than in the
Christian. And this is a good place to note one of the major strengths of God: A Biography, namely, Miles' care
throughout in distinguishing between the Hebrew Bible and the Christian Old
Testament, two different arrangements of the same books which themselves
reflect the collective personalities of the world's two highest religions.
The Christian Old Testament
shifts the great prophetic collections—Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and the
twelve minor prophets—to the end, leaving in the middle what Miles calls
"the books of silence:" Job, Lamentations, Ecclesiastes, and Esther.
Behind this altered arrangement lies, perhaps, the desire on the part of
Christian redactors to create a greater sense of continuity between the Old
Testament and the New, which is itself a book of speech, if only by Jesus.
The bulk of God: A Biography is devoted
to delineating the variety of roles in which the Bible presents God: creator,
destroyer, creator‑destroyer, friend of the family, liberator, lawgiver,
father, conqueror, executioner, arbiter, restorer, counselor, Holy One, sleeper,
recluse, and finally old man, wearied by time. And God is also shown by Miles
in His various moods: exhilarated and troubled, puzzled and puzzling, a mere
bystander, even altogether absent. Throughout, Miles examines the questions
that are raised by the texts: What is it like to be God? Does God fail? Can and
does God love? Then, in a final chapter entitled "Does God Lose
Interest?," he offers some general reflections.
In essence, Miles sees the
biblical God as a divided being, a case of schizophrenia. In polytheistic
religions, the various aspects of divinity are often played by different gods,
each of whom embodies a single salient characteristic. In monotheism, by
contrast, God has to play all the parts. So He is, or appears to be, a mass of
opposites: tender and ruthless, the all-powerful Lord of heaven but also the
sorrowing friend of the poor, and so on.
Miles views the Bible as a
tragedy, rather like Hamlet, the play
which inspired him to write this book. Hamlet is trapped within himself. He
tries to be at once a ruthless avenger and a scrupulous moralist who argues
through all his actions before performing them. In the end, however, he does
nothing, and falls victim himself. So it is with the Bible: God's character,
being all‑inclusive of divinity, is a contradictory one, and He Himself
ends by being trapped within its contradictions.
Reprinted from COMMENTARY, July 1995, by
permission; all rights reserved.
Paul Johnson is the author of A History of
Christianity, A History of the Jews, and Modern Times, among
many other books.