The problem with much Christian worship in the contemporary world,
Catholic and Protestant alike, is not that it is too entertaining but
that it is not entertaining enough. Worship characterized by upbeat rock
music, stand-up comedy, beautiful people taking center stage, and a
certain amount of Hallmark Channel sentimentality neglects one classic
form of entertainment, the one that tells us, to quote the Book of Common Prayer, that “in the midst of life we are in death.”
Perhaps some might recoil at characterizing tragedy as entertainment,
but tragedy has been a vital part of the artistic endeavors of the West
since Homer told of Achilles, smarting from the death of his beloved
Patroclus, reluctantly returning to the battlefields of Troy. Human
beings have always been drawn to tales of the tragic, as to those of the
comic, when they have sought to be lifted out of the predictable
routines of their daily lives—in other words, to be entertained.
From Aeschylus to Tennessee Williams, tragedians have thus enriched
the theater. Shakespeare’s greatest plays are his tragedies. Who would
rank Charles Dickens over Thomas Hardy and Joseph Conrad? Tragedy has
absorbed the attention of remarkable thinkers from Aristotle to Hegel to
Terry Eagleton. Continue at Carl R. Trueman
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