Words from Dic(tionary)
Allegory: (n) a story, poem or picture that can be interpreted to reveal a hidden meaning, typically a moral or political one: e.g. Pilgrim’s Progress is an allegory of the spiritual journey.
I am not sure when it happened, but somewhere along the line, the word “reality” became synonymous with “truth.”
Reality is not truth. Rather, it is our present fallen position.
Often we have to escape reality to climb a little higher to see over the mounds of our own stupidity. Yet in the past thirty or forty years, entertainment, education and even our politics have boasted their “open-mindedness” and intellectual pursuits by taking a snapshot of ongoing human behavior, insisting that it is a tableau of our destiny.
Isn’t that ridiculous?
So when I think about the allegory, I realize that it is almost a lost art–because allegory does exactly the opposite of reality movies and TV. The allegory says there are principles, feelings and ideas which are eternal and lasting–which only need to be passed through the prism of our present understanding in order to enlighten us.
Just because people are going through a season when they think God is mean, or doesn’t exist at all, does not mean that’s what they will feel in five years.
What is the consensus of human need on the issue? Find that–then draw an allegory, using the language of our times to present everlasting truth.
- I don’t want society deciding what is valuable.
- I don’t want to have a conversation with someone about television shows which extol violence, crime, graft, greed and incest and have him look at me with pity because I don’t understand that it’s “a true story.”
- I don’t want to watch vampires suck the blood out of werewolves as witches place curses on hobbits who are out to pursue rings by killing dragons and believe that I am out of step because it is just necessary escapist fantasy. Maybe Lord of the Rings and Harry Potter are attempts at allegory, but they are so cluttered with the inclusion of destiny that they lose the passion of free will.
I admire allegory.
I appreciate the way Jesus used allegory in parables, explaining the kingdom of God to people by referencing fish, coins, bread yeast and mustard seeds instead of merely bitching about the Romans and complaining about the boring Pharisees.
Reality is not truth.
Truth is finding a way to share what has blessed our species for thousands of years … in a contemporary fashion.
