Religion & Liberty Online

Love as a tesseract

Earlier this week at Public Discourse I wrote an essay on the dangers of individualism and collectivism, illustrated with literary samples from C.S. Lewis and Madeleine L’Engle respectively.

I drew the image of an individualist hell from Lewis’ The Great Divorce, citing Napoleon as an eternal exile, not on Elba or Saint Helena but into everlasting perdition. As Abraham Kuyper once wondered, in a way that strikingly echoes Lewis’ insights, “That development of the sinful nature in accordance with its own sinful drive, what else will it be but the life of hell?”

Thinking more about A Wrinkle in Time (I have not seen the film, and may not ever, based on the reactions I have seen thus far), it strikes me that L’Engle not only diagnoses the dangers of collectivism and vividly portrays them in the diabolical IT, but she also rightly identifies perhaps the key antidote to such social pathologies: love. This is not the abstract love that leads cosmopolitans to sacrifice people for the sake of ‘humanity,’ but rather the concrete love that comes to reality and expression in the midst of community. Meg’s love is manifest in the community of persons she knows as her family. She is who she is as an individual person to a large extent because of her relationships with her mother, and father, and brothers. It is her love for Charles Wallace that allows her to save him from IT, and her love for her father that leads her to cross time and space to find him. Maybe love is a kind of tesseract, bringing two people (rather than points) together who are otherwise separated by time, space, and perhaps more, sin and alienation.

So we can think of the family as a fundamental reality upon which inhuman and unreal ideologies are broken. This is perhaps why those ideologies seek in their own ways to undermine the family…because it represents a fundamental bulwark against tyranny. Like other institutions it is not untainted by sin in this fallen world, and we can all think of examples of horrible abuse and sinfulness in the context of families. These ought to sober us and prevent us from creating yet another idol of the family and deriving a false ideology from it. But even these corruptions testify to the underlying truth about the family, which Herman Bavinck called, “the foundation of all of civilized society. The authority of the father, the love of the mother, and the obedience of the child form in their unity the threefold cord that binds together and sustains all relationships within human society.”

And at least now we know a bit more of what Napoleon’s hell on earth involved, separated from friends and family…making up his own individual version of English!

Jordan J. Ballor

Jordan J. Ballor (Dr. theol., University of Zurich; Ph.D., Calvin Theological Seminary) is director of research at the Center for Religion, Culture & Democracy, an initiative of the First Liberty Institute. He has previously held research positions at the Acton Institute and Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, and has authored multiple books, including a forthcoming introduction to the public theology of Abraham Kuyper. Working with Lexham Press, he served as a general editor for the 12 volume Abraham Kuyper Collected Works in Public Theology series, and his research can be found in publications including Journal of Markets & Morality, Journal of Religion, Scottish Journal of Theology, Reformation & Renaissance Review, Journal of the History of Economic Thought, Faith & Economics, and Calvin Theological Journal. He is also associate director of the Junius Institute for Digital Reformation Research at Calvin Theological Seminary and the Henry Institute for the Study of Christianity & Politics at Calvin University.