неделя, 16 октомври 2011 г.

Angels-PERETTI, FRANK E.

Frank E. Peretti is an evangelical Christian novelist whose works—
especially his best-selling This Present Darkness (1986) and Piercing the
Darkness (1989)—feature “spiritual warfare” between Christian angels
and fallen angels. The action in these novels moves back and forth
between two interacting levels: While angels and devils cross swords
in the spiritual realm, Peretti’s human heroes and heroines do battle
with New Agers, witches, psychologists, secular educationists, and
other groups viewed by conservative Christians as being under
demonic influence.
One of the keys necessary for understanding Peretti is the belief
that the concentrated prayers of Christians provide power and protection
for warrior angels. This “prayer energy” empowers God’s angels to
win their battles against supernatural demons. A decisive defeat of
Satan’s legions in the spiritual realm disempowers Satan’s earthly minions,
which in turn leads to their defeat.
The climax of the confrontation in This Present Darkness provides
us with a good example of how this “prayer power” is supposed to
work. In the final scene of the battle, Tal, leader of the angelic host,
crosses swords with Rafar, leader of the demonic forces. At the same
time, the Remnant of God’s human “prayer warriors” engaged in the
earthly struggle are distracted by the dramatic damage inflicted by
their crusade. This distraction interrupts the flow of “power” to Tal,
and Rafar almost gets the better of him. At the last possible moment,
these Christians feel impressed by the Lord to direct their prayer
power against the demon:
[Event in spiritual realm:]
Tal could only back away from the fearsome onslaught of the
demon prince, his one good hand still holding his sword up
for defense. Rafar kept swinging and slashing, the sparks flying
from the blades as they met. Tal’s arm sank lower with
each blow. “The Lord . . . rebuke you!” Tal found the breath
to say again.
[Appropriate Christian “prayer” response, intuited by an elderly
lady:]
Edith Duster was on her feet and ready to shout it to the
heavens. “Rafar, you wicked prince of evil, in the name of
Jesus we rebuke you!”
[Effect of “prayer energy” in spiritual realm:]
Rafar’s blade zinged over Tal’s head. It
missed.
[Further “prayer” action in physical realm:]
“We bind you!” shouted the Remnant.
[Effect in spiritual realm:]
The big yellow eyes winced.
[Action in physical realm:]
“We cast you out!” Andy said.
[Effect in spiritual realm:]
There was a puff of sulfur, and Rafar bent
over. Tal leaped to his feet.
[Action in physical realm:]
“We rebuke you, Rafar!” Edith shouted
again.
[Effect in spiritual realm:]
Rafar screamed. Tal’s blade had torn him open.
Although Christians have always believed
in the power of prayer, the Darkness novels picture
prayer as having a fantastic, magical efficacy
against fallen angels.
Peretti is a gifted writer who is able to weave together believable
stories of the everyday world with fantastic Dungeons-and-Dragons
struggles between otherworldly angels and demons. The results of this
skillful juxtaposition are novels with an eerie narrative landscape that
evangelical scholar Irving Hexham has described as “sanctified
Stephen King.” Peretti’s art has created an exciting narrative world
replete with supernatural phenomena, psychic intuitions, quasi-magical
powers, and sword-swinging warriors. A fascination with the
occult is evident in Peretti’s descriptions of demons:
He was like a high-strung little gargoyle, his hide a slimy, bottomless
black, his body thin and spiderlike: half humanoid, half
animal, totally demon. Two huge yellow cat-eyes bulged out of
his face, darting to and fro, peering, searching. His breath came
in short, sulfurous gasps, visible as glowing yellow vapor.
Even though Christians have traditionally believed in the guidance
of the Holy Spirit, the picture Peretti draws of highly personal
angels conveying guidance to the minds of God’s saints makes Christ-
ian inspiration more lively and dramatic. Peretti also pictures angels as
capable of materializing to help God’s chosen, as in This Present Darkness
when the angel Betsy materializes to give one of the heroines,
Bernice Krueger, a short motorcycle ride. Once Bernice has reached
her destination, Betsy evaporates like some figure out of an occult
novel. As with many of the events that take place in the Darkness
novels, such eerie encounters reflect the fascination with the supernatural
and, more specifically, with angels that has come to characterize
contemporary conservative Christianity.

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