Quaker Theology #11 -- Spring-Summer 2005
REVIEW
The Spiral Staircase: My Climb Out of Darkness
by Karen Armstrong. Alfred A. Knopf, New York: 306 pages.
Grace Notes
by Heidi Hart. University of Utah Press, Utah: 230 pages
Reviewed by Ellen McCambley
The Spiral Staircase is the latest book written by scholar and author
Karen Armstrong, who presents it as a “sequel” to her earlier book, Through the
Narrow Gate, which documents her early years in a Catholic convent. Karen is the
author of several other books on religious affairs, including A History of
God, The Battle for God, Islam, and Buddha.
In 1962, the year Karen Armstrong entered the convent, I attended a retreat for teachers at the Dominican Retreat House in Elkins Park, PA. The retreat was a silent retreat, which meant that during meals, rather than discussion, we had “spiritual reading.” Breakfast on Saturday morning was my all time favorite, creamed beef on toast. The reading for the day was the life of Mother Cornelia Connelly, foundress of the Sisters of the Holy Child Jesus – the congregation that Karen entered.
I can still picture myself in that sunny dining room, trying to swallow a mouthful creamed beef and toast, tears streaming down my face, listening to the story of the hardships Mother Connelly had suffered, and how her faith had sustained her.
Although admittedly humorous, this memory has great meaning
for me. The story of Cornelia Connelly is one of learning one’s vocation through
trial, error and great suffering. This was a timely lesson as it was during this
very retreat that I decided to enter the Dominican Sisters of Elkins Park. And
two years later, this is exactly what I did.
So when I was asked to write this review, I eagerly agreed, as I felt a kinship
with Karen Armstrong. Although in different countries and in different orders,
we had both felt drawn to religious life, entered, and then, after a period of
some years, had decided to leave. And in leaving, we both had to deal with our
“failure” and its consequences.
As I read The Spiral Staircase I began to wonder why it was that Karen
and I appeared to have such totally different perceptions of religious life. I
suppose that part of it is that Karen was 17 when she entered; I was 21. She
entered immediately after graduating from high school, and I entered after
teaching for three years. She appears a carefree young girl, whereas I was a
battle-scarred veteran in the faith wars, having once told God, as I suffered a
debilitating bone problem at age 19, that He [God] had only asked three hours of
His son, whereas I’d been in pain for over three years and wanted it to stop.
Shortly thereafter, it did.
While I was reading The Spiral Staircase, a friend who was visiting
picked up the book and read the first few chapters, after which she exclaimed,
“Oh, Ellen, I never knew you went through such a terrible time!” I replied
simply, “I didn’t.” But it was this short conversation which led me to consider
the book more closely. Those of us who have experience with religious life will
read Karen’s story one way, and those who are “novices” so to speak, quite
another. Thus, it is important that The Spiral Staircase be put in
perspective – it is one woman’s story of her own unique experience. But in many
ways it is more because, in presenting her story as she does, Karen makes a
scathing indictment of religious life, and the Church that called this life into
being.
I would have had a much easier time reviewing this book, if I thought that
Karen’s two attempts to write about her early experiences had brought her some
closure. But I do not find this is the case, although Karen does say of her own
experience:
. . . now I could name my anger, give it a definite form and shape. This was
liberating and healing, like lancing a boil . . . . [230]
As a reader, it appears to me that Karen has not been able to truly lance this
boil, despite repeated literary efforts. Rather, she seems to have succeeded
only in tearing off the scab – an action which causes great pain, but results in
no healing, as the boil is permitted to again fester and grow. I say this
because, even after writing Through the Narrow Gate, Karen still takes up
over two thirds of its sequel, The Spiral Staircase, revisiting her
experience. Only in the last two chapters does she appear ready to set this
aside to discuss other interests.
Karen tells us The Spiral Staircase is an attempt to pick up where
Through the Narrow Gate left off, and in one sense it does, as it covers her
attempts to find her way in the world after leaving the convent. But she
presents the story as if she were driving into the future looking at the world
through the rear view mirror. Every new discovery comes with the “realization”
of how much the convent, her superiors, or God had held her back. In so doing, I
believe Karen loses much of the joy new discoveries bring.
I find this troubling. Reading this book from a 21st Century perspective, one
could easily agree with Karen’s perspective on the past. But readers must
remember that Karen [and I] entered the convent in the early 60’s, which were
the best of times and the worst of times for the Roman Catholic Church. Pope
John XXIII had just convened a Second Vatican Council and a new wind was blowing
through the Church. Massive changes to the very structures Karen found so
oppressive were at that moment in the works. But Karen’s narrative appears to
miss or dismiss this perspective. For her, it was too little, too late.
A scene from one of my favorite movies, “The African Queen,” comes to mind.
There is a scene late in the movie where the two main characters, Rose and
Charlie, lie exhausted in the bottom of their boat. Despite repeated efforts,
having failed to dislodge the boat from the thick mud and sludge of the swampy
river, the boat remains firmly stuck. However, what we, the audience can see –
as the camera pulls away, is first the boat, and then the boat and the river,
and finally, from a farther distance, the boat, river, and the surrounding
territory. The boat is at a turn in the river, just inches away from their
destination: the ocean. We also see that, as the rain continues to fall, the
boat is slowly rising and beginning to move, unbeknownst to the sleeping heroine
and hero.
And thus I see Karen’s narrative. When she reflects on her past, I find her
mired in past hurt and disappointment. She appears not to see her experience as
a microcosm of the whole picture. I can’t fault 17-year-old Karen for this, but
I do wish 50-plus Karen could gain some perspective.
I find that even in those moments when Karen is reflecting on her past, she
still puts a 17-year-old’s spin on it. For example, while relating the story of
the paper she wrote for Mother Greta’s class, she states:
As I stared wordlessly back at Mother Greta, I knew that, if it had been up to
her, she would have scrapped this course in apologetics and introduced us to a
more fruitful study of the New Testament. But, like any nun, she was bound by
the orders of her superiors. . . . It was a sobering moment . . . the older nun
mentally tired and demoralized, while the postulant gazed at her blankly, both
of us deliberately turning our minds away from the light [33].
This story has great Hollywood appeal, but is it the whole truth? Or is it as
the great philosopher Ashleigh Brilliant once conjectured, that: "Some of the
things that will live longest in my memory never really happened..."
I never met Mother Greta, but I knew a great many teachers like her. Perhaps it
wasn’t demoralization that Karen saw on her face. Perhaps it was the frustration
that many teachers feel in trying to teach bright, intelligent, and young [i.e.
unseasoned] students: those who are bright enough to intellectually grasp an
idea, but too inexperienced to see all the other factors involved.
Once, while I was preparing a class of elementary school children for the
Sacrament of Penance [confession], I complained to a friend that the curriculum
for preparing these children seemed designed to teach them 2000 ways to commit
sin. Therefore, I can relate to Mother Greta’s dilemma. At that time, I chose to
teach in a way I thought more appropriate, following the spirit, not the letter,
of the law.
Nor was I alone in this; many thinking people did the same. For example, prior
to Vatican Council II, there were many good, intelligent, faithful men and women
who had studied scripture and tradition, and knew things had to change. But
there were also those who, feeling threatened, and having power, effectively
silenced these voices. But not for long. Pope John Paul and Vatican II changed
this, and in so doing, allowed the rest of us to finally hear the voices of Hans
Kung, Gregory Baum, Edward Schillebeeckx, Yves Congar, Karl Rahner and Bernard
Haring, to name just a few. These theologians may have been “silenced,” but they
were not silent. They continued to write and discuss and think – and when the
day came that the doors were finally opened to them, they were ready.
During my graduate studies at Fordham, I was fortunate to have Father Bernard
Haring as a professor. One day in class, a Priest/student asked him, in great
frustration, “Father Haring, you refer to the Church as ‘holy’. How can you call
a Church holy when it has wreaked so much havoc on innocent men and women over
the years with its antiquated and repressed rules and regulations concerning
marriage?”
All 40 students became very still as we, many of whom had been asking the same
question, stared silently at this obviously holy man, awaiting his response to
this challenge. Father Haring paused for a minute or two, considering, and then
he replied simply, “Because with all the sinners, I have also been privileged to
know many of the saints.”
I would appreciate such a balanced view from Karen Armstrong. For example, I
would have found it helpful if Karen could have also applied her comment
regarding Islam: “we cannot judge the faith of ½ billion Muslims by the
extremists” [304] to Christian theologians as well as all who influenced her
early religious life.
In addition to a balanced view, I would also like more scholarly research. I had
to smile when she contradicted over 2000 years of Biblical scholarship by
broadly asserting that St. Paul, not Jesus Christ, founded Christianity [232]. I
agree with Karen that this was indeed “startling information.” I also believe
that revisionist history does not lend credibility to her ideas.
Karen tells us that, in beginning her study of Islam, she had to dismantle her
old positions, which she saw to be “ignorant, prejudiced, and deeply conditioned
by her culture” [257]. In truth, I find that “ignorant, prejudiced and deeply
conditioned by culture” aptly describes Karen’s views regarding God in general,
and Christianity in particular. As one who comes from this tradition, I found
some of her rhetoric rather tedious.
I do not mean to diminish Karen’s suffering, but it must be kept in the
perspective of the times, and the times were 1964, not 2004. If Karen cannot
gain this perspective, she risks falling into the trap described by theologian
Bernard Haring:
Theologians will become useless and inauthentic not only through cowardice, but
also if they allow themselves to become embittered and–instead of proclaiming
the good news–struggle for their cause out of resentment and with bitterness. A
theologian can likewise betray the Church and truth when he denies his
conviction of the truth “out of obedience,” just as when he goes his own lonely
way in rebellious disobedience and battles embittered (even when such a battle
is necessary). . .
Avoiding this trap is critical because Karen Armstrong is one of the few subject
matter experts on the subject of Islam. As such, both before and after September
11, 2001, she has been able to help many come to a better understanding of Islam
and its relationship to the two other Abrahamic faiths. Such expertise is
critically important, as we live in a world where much misery is brought about
in the name of God and religion. This is true not just in Iraq and Iran, but in
Northern Ireland, Israel/Palestine, Africa and in our own United States, where
we have the red [god fearing] and blue [godless] states.
Karen is correct in asserting that the study of other people’s religious beliefs
is now no longer merely desirable, but necessary for our very survival [304].
And this study requires that we find credible teachers. Karen’s experience and
knowledge of the three Abrahamic faiths and her ability to so expertly discuss
these is invaluable in today’s world. But if she allows personal experience to
blind her to her own traditions and the wealth of information and experience
they contain, this would be a true loss, not only to Karen, but to her listeners
as well.
Heidi Hart is a poet, singer and voice teacher. After reading Grace Notes,
I’d have to add that she is also a gifted storyteller. She brings to her life
story a rich blend of music, spirituality and groundedness, possessing that most
special of gifts, the storyteller’s ability to take simple everyday events and
make them come alive for the listener.
Like Karen Armstrong, Heidi Hart also came upon the road less traveled in her
spiritual journey, and took it. But, unlike Karen, Heidi does not affix blame
for her condition. Yes, she does remark on some of the teachings the Mormon
Church in which she was brought up, and explains in some detail the rituals that
are performed during various ceremonies. But I do not find in her the burning
resentment I found in Karen Armstrong, or the need to prove herself right by
proving others wrong.
Like many young women of her generation, and in particular, many young Mormon
women, Heidi Hart believed that she was meant to grow up, marry and to become
the “Angel in the House” – a perfect wife, mother and helpmeet to her husband.
And, like many young woman, she discovered this was just not enough.
Luckily for Heidi, she and her husband Kent were able to grow together as they
faced life’s challenges. Kent, when he left family and job to travel with Heidi
across country to Connecticut so that she might attend graduate school, and
Heidi when, three years later, she returned to Salt Lake with Kent so that he
might have the support of his family and faith community.
Interwoven in the story of this marriage is not just the story of a girl and the
woman she became, her growth as wife and mother, but also how this growth was
facilitated by the support and love she received from her family, her friends
and her faith community.
Each chapter in Grace Notes follows the same format: diary, nine openings
[from the 13th century poet Rumi who compared the human body, with its nine
openings, to a reed flute torn from the reed bed; it sings out its longing for
home], chant, passaggio [transitions], conversation, and silence. The chapters
do not follow a strict chronology, and I find this delightful. Rather, Heidi
relates events as they occur to her.
For example, a memory about a neighborhood oddball [the mad trumpeter] has her
recalling the times she gave voice to her own primal anger. She weaves into this
story memories about the silence of her mother and grandmother in the face of
their husbands’ deadly depression, her own similar experiences with Kent, and
lastly, the times when she angrily vents her anger and rage. And in this weaving
she shares what she learns:
The screamer in the gully, in all his pain and craziness, is in me, and in my
children . . . .There are times when I don’t care if I ravage my vocal cords.
But my liberation from appropriateness has shown me what lies at the other end
of the spectrum: the flash of frightened hurt in my sons’ eyes when I whirl
around and holler. Maybe I’ll get myself a trumpet, haul it into the backyard,
and blare at the stars. [p 124]
Heidi’s fate could have been the same as her mother and the other women in her
family, who, though they bore their lot in life stoically, suffered physical
ailments as a result. Heidi managed to break this cycle, and she did so with the
help of her husband. She reflects:
If it’s true that people find partners who expose the work they must do in order
to grow, I found someone whose silences asked me, though I didn’t know it at
first, to learn to break them. [p 60].
And later:
Now, in those rare moments when the old silence rises in our house, I fight the
temptation to cower and tiptoe. Recently, after I told Kent his silent treatment
was unacceptable behavior, he thanked me. “You don’t know how it helps me when
you speak up,” he said. I told him it had taken me my whole life to learn how.
[p. 65]
As one whose life is music, it is interesting that Heidi’s faith journey from
the Mormon tradition led her to the Society of Friends, and unprogrammed friends
at that: a group who worships in silence, without hymns, music or a minister.
Yet it seems to be this very silence that leads her to deeper reflection, and
opens her to the beauty of other traditions. For example, during one of their
weekly “family home evening” with her sons, she used the Jewish concept of
Tikkun to help them understand their place in the universe.
Giving them a clear glass she and Kent had received for a wedding present, she
asked them to drop it into a deep bowl, whereupon it shattered with a great
noise. As the boys delightedly looked upon their handiwork Heidi asked them to
Imagine these broken pieces are all we can see of God in this world. Imagine
your job is to find these pieces, no matter how small, and gather them up, and
put them back together. [p 134].
Perhaps it is because Karen Armstrong writes from England, that cold, damp land
of the reformation, while Heidi Hart writes from Salt Lake City, Utah, the
sunny, hot land of the Latter Day Saints, that I note such heaviness in the one
and lightness in the other. But in both I see the story of a woman struggling to
find her own unique voice. And as such, both Karen and Heidi are models for all
who are struggling to put their “shattered pieces” back together again.
This, in a nutshell, is Heidi’s story. She is able to go back to each of the
“Shattered moments” of her life and to “forgive” those involved, including
herself, for being all too human. In doing so, she finally finds her own voice.
Rather, she sees her life as a progression and, as she later learns to call it,
a leading.
I can ask questions: A change in the weather? A Leading? I can try to answer . .
. . I can look at the results in time and space: Three weeks after our arrival
in Salt Lake, Kent was offered the job I’d seen in his bar journal. My sons were
able to know their great-grandparents before they died. My mother and I have
gone into therapy together. Kent and I have embarked on an interfaith marriage,
joining hands across our differences. With Kate beside me at the piano, I’ve
continued to find music to sing and people who want to hear it. And had I not
moved back home, I might never have begun, with many fearful pauses, to find
words for my own history . . . .
I did what Quakers have advised each other for centuries, though I didn’t know
this saying at the time: “Proceed as Way opens.” It opened, and I have not been
diminished. [pp. 206-207]
Nor have we. It is my hope that Heidi will continue to share with us her stories
of faith and family. The world has need of such tales.
Works Cited
Armstrong, Karen. Through The Narrow Gate, St. Martin’s Press, NY 1981.
Brilliant, Ashleigh, Pot-Shot #722.
http://www.ashleighbrilliant.com
Haring, Bernard C.SS.R. and Swidler, Leonard J.
My Witness For The Church, Paulist Press, NY 1992.
McLuhan, Marshall and Fiore, Quentin
The Medium Is the Massage, Random House (1967).
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