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Developing a Sense of the Poetic
By Doug Talley
Medieval Christian
scholars exercised a rule of interpretation that looked for
fourfold meaning in Scripture — literal, allegorical, moral
and anagogical. Dante essentially distilled the categories
down to two — the literal and the allegorical, the allegorical
being anything beyond the literal.
Scotus went so
far as to say that every scripture was subject to an infinite
number of meanings, like the iridescence of peacock feathers.
This may be extreme and lead to the excess of “looking beyond
the mark” and “wresting scriptures” to our destruction. We
see things that were never intended. Sometimes a parable is
meant to be literal; at other times it is more. Sometimes
a rose is just a rose. Yet there is something that persists
in the human heart, which in the right context, insists on
envisioning the rose as a woman. This is one of the effects
of poetry — the invitation to perceive beyond the literal.
But it begs an important question: when is it safe to look
for a double meaning in a literary passage or a verse of scripture?
How is one to read?
In his work, Reflections on the Psalms, the modern Christian
apologist, C.S. Lewis has already addressed these questions
to some extent, quite admirably. He notes in his introduction
that it would be wise to allow for the poetic in Scripture.
“It seems to me appropriate, almost inevitable,” he writes,
“that when that great Imagination which in the beginning,
for Its own delight and for the delight of men and angels
... had invented and formed the whole world of Nature, submitted
to express Itself in human speech, that speech should sometimes
be poetry. For poetry too is a little incarnation, giving
body to what had been before invisible and inaudible.” (Lyle
W. Dorsett, ed., The Essential C. S. Lewis, New York, New York: Touchstone Books,
1996, p. 395). In looking for poetry in Scripture, and in
developing a sense of the poetic, a reader may become more
skilled in accurately identifying additional meaning in Scripture,
the figurative or allegorical as well as the literal.
The Inherent Difficulty of
Scripture
C.S. Lewis readily
acknowledges the difficulty that reading the Scriptures poses:
We may observe
that the teaching of Our Lord Himself, in which there is no
imperfection, is not given us in that cut-and-dried, fool-proof,
systematic fashion we might have expected or desired. He wrote
no book. We have only reported sayings, most of them uttered
in answer to questions, shaped in some degree by their context.
And when we have collected them all we cannot reduce them
to a system. He preaches but He does not lecture. He uses
paradox, proverb, exaggeration, parable, irony; even (I mean
no irreverence) the “wisecrack.” He utters maxims, which,
like popular proverbs, if rigorously taken, may seem to contradict
one another. His teaching therefore cannot be grasped by the
intellect alone, cannot be “got up” as if it were a “subject.”
If we try to do that with it, we shall find Him the most elusive
of teachers. He hardly ever gave a straight answer to a straight
question. He will not be, in the way we want, “pinned down.”
The attempt is (again, I mean no irreverence) like trying
to bottle a sunbeam. (Id., pp. 403-404).
In his examination
of the Psalms, Lewis explains why it is we should accept the
presence of second meanings in Scripture. He writes:
We are committed
to it in principle by Our Lord Himself. On that famous journey
to Emmaus He found fault with the two disciples for not believing
what the prophets had said. They ought to have known from
their Bibles that the Anointed One, when He came, would enter
into His glory through suffering. He then explained, from
“Moses” (i.e., the Pentateuch) down, all the places in the
Old Testament “concerning Himself” (Luke 24: 25-27). He clearly
identified Himself with a figure often mentioned in the Scriptures;
appropriated to Himself many passages where a modern scholar
might see no such reference. In the predictions of His Own
Passion which He had previously made to the disciples, He
was obviously doing the same thing. He accepted — indeed He
claimed to be — the second meaning of Scripture. (Id., pp. 405-406).
Help from Modern Revelation
This view is consistent
with what modern revelation teaches. If, as Alma testifies
in the Book of Mormon, “all things denote there is a God,”
we might expect to see and understand this “second meaning”
— the hand of Christ — in virtually any creation, not just
in Scripture. Again, however, there is a danger in reading
beyond the mark. The Prophet Joseph Smith laid down a general
principle for reading the parables of Jesus that is instructive:
In reference to
the prodigal son, I said it was a subject I had never dwelt
upon; that it was understood by many to be one of the intricate
subjects of the scriptures: and even the Elders of this Church
have preached largely upon it, without having any rule of
interpretation at all. What is the rule of interpretation?
Just no interpretation at all. Understand it precisely as
it reads (i.e., read it only literally). I have a key by which I understand
the scriptures. I enquire, what was the question which drew
out the answer, or caused Jesus to utter the parable? It is not national:
it does not refer to Abraham, Israel or the Gentiles, in a
national capacity as some suppose. To ascertain its meaning,
we must dig up the root and ascertain what it was that drew
the saying out of Jesus … Jesus was not put to it so, but
He could have found something to illustrate His subject, if
He had designed it for a nation or for nations: but He did
not. It was for men in an individual capacity; and all straining
on this point is a bubble. (Joseph Fielding Smith, Compiler, The Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith, Salt Lake City:
Deseret Book Company, 1976, pp. 276-277).
On the other hand,
Joseph Smith was not a mere literalist, and understood there
were parables uttered, which were not meant to be read in
literal fashion only, but had allegorical meaning as well.
Perhaps the most stunning example of his ability to read beyond
the literal is found in his exegesis of the parables found
in Matthew 13. (Id., pp. 94-102). He referred to these parables, of which
there are seven, as “beautiful sayings” and it is true that
these seven little stories, or prose poems, are strung one
to another like a necklace of lovely pearls. These, in order,
are the parables:
1.
The parable of
the sower and the seed
2.
The parable of
the wheat and the tares
3.
The parable of
the mustard seed
4.
The parable of
the leaven
5.
The parable of
hidden treasure
6.
The parable of
the merchant and the pearl
7.
The parable of
the fish and the net
Of these seven,
Jesus offered interpretation privately to his disciples of
two — the parable of the sower and the seed and the parable
of the wheat and the tares — and taught them how to see and
understand beyond the literal. As if to finish the instruction,
Joseph Smith offered allegorical interpretations of the other
five. His interpretations of these five do, in fact, validate
the Medieval method of exegesis in searching for multiple
meanings in scripture. The only caution, Joseph would seem
to add, is that the rule not be applied universally to every
passage of scripture, but only where it applies without contortion.
Joseph read into
the seven parables a prophetic allegory of the history of
the Church. The first parable had reference to the gospel
then being taught and the Church to be formed by Christ. The
second parable had reference to the apostasy — that at the
very moment the early church was being established by Christ,
Satan would sow tares of dissension and false doctrine and
thereby ruin the planting Christ had made. Christ himself
gave this interpretation of the parables as they pertained
to the Church of that era.
Seeing Beyond the Literal
It was left to
Joseph Smith to interpret the remaining parables, which he
saw as all referring to the Church in the last days, the Church
of the current era, beginning with the parable of the mustard
seed. He wrote:
And again, another
parable put He forth unto them, having an allusion to the
Kingdom, that should be set up, just previous to or at the
time of the harvest, which reads as follows — “The Kingdom
of Heaven is like a grain of mustard seed, which a man took
and sowed in his field: which indeed is the least of all
seeds: but, when it is grown, it is the greatest among herbs,
and becometh a tree, so that the birds of the air come and
lodge in the branches thereof.” Now we can discover plainly
that this figure is given to represent the Church as it
shall come forth in the last days. Behold, the Kingdom of
Heaven is likened unto it. Now, what is like unto it?
Let us take the
Book of Mormon, which a man took and hid in his field, securing
it by his faith, to spring up in the last days, or in due
time; let us behold it coming forth out of the ground, which
is indeed accounted the least of all seeds, but behold it
branching forth, yea, even towering, with lofty branches,
and God-like majesty, until it, like the mustard seed, becomes
the greatest of all herbs. And it is truth, and it has sprouted
and come forth out of the earth, and righteousness begins
to look down from heaven, and God is sending down his powers,
gifts and angels, to lodge in the branches thereof.
(Id., p. 98).
This seems a marvelously
inspired interpretation and confirms that what is granted
by the Holy Spirit is often deeply poetic. A Medieval theologian
might have been able to find a fourfold interpretation in
the passage, including perhaps an allegorical meaning, but
only Joseph could offer an expansive allegorical interpretation
capturing all its nuances, that the tiny grain of mustard
seed is like the Book of Mormon, a compilation of gold plates
which an ancient prophet buried in the ground, later to sprout
up by translation through the power of God, and then to spread
forth into the entire world, attended by signs of testimony
— visions and tongues and angelic visitations — that would
lodge like birds in its branches.
Somewhere I once
read a tidy, little aphorism that it takes a great poet to
read a great poet. I do not believe that Joseph ever made
any pretensions of becoming a great poet, but he clearly had
developed a great poetic sensibility and was a wonderfully
creative reader of metaphor. He certainly had his models,
found in the Book of Mormon itself, such as in the ancient
prophet Alma.
Alma was himself
a creative reader, able to extract multiple meaning from scriptural
passages with as much skill as any Medieval theologian, as
evident from his interpretation of the story of Nephi and
the Liahona found in Alma 37:38-47. Clearly Alma was not reading
only as a literalist. He intuited in the purely historical
account of the Liahona a deeper allegorical meaning, a “type”
or “shadow” in his terminology, and provided an interpretation
that just as the Liahona, like a compass, led his fathers
to the promised land, so the word of Christ would lead disciples
to the promised land of heaven. Alma found both a literal
meaning and an allegorical meaning in the account of the Liahona.
The Value of a Metaphor
If any confirmation
were needed that Scripture is susceptible to multiple meanings,
Alma and Joseph Smith and C. S. Lewis have provided it. But
the principle is self-evident. The Creator of this world intended
that His children develop a poetic sensibility and see all
things fashioned by Him as a metaphor of His power and love.
It is seen in the figures of Christ as the “Lamb” or the “Bread
of Life.” In developing a sense of the poetic, we learn to
appreciate the value of a metaphor and its ability to provide
multi-layered meaning, richness and complexity to our faith.
While it is true
that we are to read and understand Scripture by the power
of the Spirit, if we take this to mean that we must merely
read and “feel,” then the injunction is entirely too easy
and simplistic. We have the further injunction that we “must
study it out in [our] mind,” which, in our approach to Scripture,
suggests real work. It is our province and privilege when
reading to look for multiple meanings where they are to be
found. We have permission, and the obligation, like any scribe
instructed in the kingdom of heaven, to be as the householder
who brings out of his treasure things new, as well as old.
If we have no other reason for pursuing poetry, this reason
alone would suffice: reading fine poetry helps develop our
skills of interpretation, aids in our understanding of Scripture,
and therefore, can bring us more intimately into relationship
with Christ, the Master Poet.
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| About
the Editor: |
| 
Doug Talley
graduated with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Creative Writing from
Bowling Green State University in 1976. Upon graduation he spent
the summer in the Grand Tetons looking for God, which led him on
a hitch-hiking spree to Salt Lake City. He joined the Church and
thereafter served in the Italy, Rome Mission from 1978 to 1980.
After his mission he enrolled in the University of Akron School
of Law. He graduated in 1984 and has "fiddled at the law"
ever since, currently as the CEO of Millennial Assurance Services,
Inc. He has published one book of poetry, The Angel Voice of
Irony, a sonnet sequence about his conversion. A second book
of poetry, April in October, is planned for publication in
2003. His poems have appeared in The American Scholar, Midwest
Poetry Review, Piedmont Literary Review, Hellas,
and other journals. He and his wife and seven children live in Akron,
Ohio, where he has served in every ward calling from scoutmaster
to bishop.
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