The Lion Aslan could be a lot of things, beyond being a powerful lion
in the land of Narnia. I’ve been told he’s basically Jesus, but as I could
never really square the adventurous fun of the Narnia books with the
sanctimonious boredom of Sunday School, I always find that part of C.S. Lewis a
little irritating.
For those who haven’t had the pleasure, Aslan is a magical
lion who returns to the land of Narnia and breaks the cold misery that the
White Witch has cursed the land with for years upon end. Aslan’s revolutionary
return doesn’t go smoothly—he is betrayed, and in a trade for the life of his
traitor, agrees to be killed by a mob of his opposition.
His sacrifice is done at the Stone Table, and Aslan is tied
up and muzzled before he is paraded in front of all the creatures who believe
in the creepy darkness of the White Witch’s power. And then the Witch kills
him, with a knife made of stone.
The girls, Lucy and Susan, who hid in the shadows and
watched their hero be bound and slaughtered wait until the Horribles go hooting
away with the Witch. And then they come to him, hold his dead paws through the
darkest part of the night, and take off his muzzle with their frozen fingers.
Soon, the mice come creeping out of the fields and gnaw off the ropes that tied
Aslan down.
And then, when the mice are gone and the girls are looking
at the rising sun and imagining a world and a battle without their hero, there
is a crack that shakes the earth, and Aslan comes back to life, stronger than
ever.
I can, now, see the parallels to Jesus’ death and
resurrection. I can also see the parallels to the seasons, to tides, to Apollo
13 slingshoting around the dark side of the moon.
It was the muzzling and the release that I thought of today,
though. Science isn’t God, isn’t some sort of untouchable Deity or golden-maned
savior in a fairy tale. However, in the work that the EPA, NOAA, and the USDA
does, there is the information that can guide our country and culture out of
the cursed rut of our own destruction through climate change and the impacts of
pollution. Muzzling all of those voices, all those stories, all that
information and data and solutions and knowledge, that is muzzling my real-life
Aslan.
We need mice and moles and the little fingers of people
lurking in the shadows to take off the muzzles and rip the ropes apart with
their—our—teeth. The White Witch and the White House, they muzzle their prey
before the slaughter.
Aslan explains to the relieved and confused little girls
that there was a deeper than time magic that brought him back—that because the
sacrifice was his choice in exchange for another’s life, it doesn’t “count.”
For Lewis’s purposes of presenting Christian fables, this sacrifice to eternal
life works well.
I, however, think more about the actions of the mice and the
girls—they freed their hero, even as he seemed dead and gone. I like to believe
that this—saving the savior—is part of what gives Aslan back his life. What
good would his sacrifice have been if there had been no one at his side,
releasing his voice to roar, his paws to crush the White Witch in battle?
I don’t need to spell this out with some fancy metaphor and
image. Aslan is the work that the EPA, NOAA, USDA, NASA, and so many others do
on behalf of all of us, for our safety and security in a fragile world. Trump
and his gag order are the White Witch and her mob and muzzle and stone knife.
And we’re Susan, Lucy, and the Mice. Let’s get going, while
we our love and belief can still bring back what we love and need to fight the
coming battles.
|
No comments:
Post a Comment