Since the last thing I wrote about was the death of my adopted brother, I wasn’t quite sure where to go with my next entry. It felt a bit strange to say anything without it sounding like, “Well, one of the most important people in my life died a horrific death at a premature age. Now, Happy Holidays!” Weird. So I decided there was really only one thing I could do. I wrote about the X-Files.
When the show “X-Files” first aired in the late 80’s, I wanted no part of watching it. I didn’t want to develop my own mental files full of spooky images and metaphysical freakiness. I was such a little Puritan back then that I didn’t even listen to “secular” music, and my absence of a dating life was, well, fodder for another post.
It took a number of years, but as I grew up I started thinking that if God was threatened by a little Sci-fi he needed to be bigger to be worth my time. I also became a sucker for imaginative, morally complex programs and probably dared to try the show once and got hooked. I admit to being a born nerd.
I still watch the show in syndication. It’s outdated. The computers are antiquated and the effects rely heavily on low light levels. As with any good show, though, it rests on solid characters who are believable and three-dimensional. Dana Scully is young and idealistic. She a doctor who follows the rules and relys on scientific deduction in order to establish her beliefs. She’s also the one with a faith tradition in the Catholic Church, and her cross necklace is intentionally visible in various episodes. As the show progresses she struggles with her faith but it appears to me that over time she becomes the embodiment of a marriage between science and faith.
Fox Mulder has plenty of faith, but sometimes lets his judgment become clouded by his passions. He is the believer avidly pursuing evidence to support his theories of government conspiracies and extra-terrestrial life. Without Scully’s steadying influence he has a tendency to get himself in trouble with vampires or killer cockroaches or some guy whose shadow kills people.
In my early days I thought the show was sort of heretical, God help me. Since then the internal boxes in which I held all life’s answers have become unhinged. Engaging in the mental work of reconciling spiritual mysteries with concrete realities is a struggle from which I’ve emerged thinking that mystery is one of the few realities that are actually dependable. God, if he is any kind of God at all, isn’t afraid of mystery or doubt or the study of science in the world he made.
Real life may not be full of monsters and aliens and toxic bugs, but then again, it’s a damn dangerous place. And the dangers here can be interminably dull when you know there’s no able partner out there, running to your rescue. It’s tempting to give up, to curl into a ball and close out the world. Hope can look stupid.
I’ve been tempted many times to disengage from the process of growing, facing my demons and engaging in relationships with other people. It felt too overwhelming and futile. Thankfully, when I’ve been in that state I’ve had people who’ve extended themselves and offered safe haven to my delicate heart. It’s helped me not to give up. Believe it or not, that’s what X-Files is mostly about for me. They never give up. I want to believe.