I am your rat.


Since we have a few people who seem to like poetry here, I thought you might be amused by some Christian poems. Actually, if you like and respect poetry, you might not want to click through that link—this is poetry like throwing a cat in a woodchipper is music. I’ve included a few small fragments below the fold if you just want a taste.

A Young Atheist

As you gaze into the bosom of God,
A big empty whole you will see.
God is so empty and sad because He is so lonely.
He misses you so much, dear.
That hole in His heart,
so big and empty, is where you once came from.
His life and love is what made you what you are.

The Invincible Eagle

Rats do not have feathers.
They do not have wings.
But you, your wings beat down the air.
They lift you higher and higher still.
Carry me with you in your strong beaks.
I am your rat.

Drinking Alcohol in Heaven

Hear God’s horn!
Come! Come! My Baby! Come! My Baby!
General Jesus is calling!
Hear the drums of heaven!
Law of love rules!
Great party! Jesus’ bride jumps around like a gazelle!
She is completely drunk!

There are also some tedious Christian stories and incoherent sermons at the site, which, curiously enough, is based out of New Hope, Minnesota, a Minneapolis suburb. We do have some weird ones up here.

(via Overcompensating)

Comments

  1. says

    I clicked, thinking, “how bad could it be?”. Oh my. Very very bad indeed. I realize now that I’ve never red truly bad poetry… until now. Maybe these xtians are actually Vogons?

  2. Ross says

    From the first one..

    “A big empty whole you will see.”

    There’s many a true word spoken in bad poetry.

  3. Ian H Spedding FCD says

    …this is poetry like throwing a cat in a woodchipper is music.

    “…like throwing a cat in a woodchipper…”? That’s an image I could do without first thing in the morning. How about the sound of an evolutionary biologist suffering the Revenge of Snowball and The Zebrafish.

  4. June says

    “You are never left alone
    With God in your heart.”

    These poems are great clues to the causes of religious delusion. Longing for a parent figure. Needs for protection, warmth, hugging. Fear of loneliness.

    Who wouldn’t want a God who provides all these things?

  5. Steve LaBonne says

    Here’s an antidote- a portion of the greatest poem, “Wild Broom” (La Ginestra), by the greatest atheist poet (and one of the greatest of all poets), Giacomo Leopardi.

    Often I sit here, at night,on these desolate slopes,
    that a hardened lava-flow has clothed
    with brown, and which seem to undulate still,
    and over the gloomy waste,
    I see the stars flame, high
    in the purest blue,
    mirrored far off by the sea:
    the universe glittering with sparks
    that wheel through the tranquil void.
    And then I fix my eyes on those lights
    that seem pin-pricks,
    yet are so vast in form
    that earth and sea are really a pin-prick
    to them: to whom man,
    and this globe where man is nothing,
    are completely unknown: and gazing
    at those still more infinitely remote,
    knots, almost, of stars,
    that seem like mist to us, to which
    not only man and earth but all
    our stars, infinite in number and mass,
    with the golden sun,
    are unknown, or seem like points
    of misted light, as they appear
    from earth: what do you seem like,
    then, in my thoughts, O children
    of mankind? And mindful of
    your state here below, of which
    the ground I stand on bears witness,
    and that, on the other hand, you believe
    that you’ve been appointed the master
    and end of all things: and how often
    you like to talk about the creators
    of all things universal, who descended
    to this obscure grain of sand called earth,
    for you, and happily spoke to you, often:
    and that, renewing these ridiculous dreams,
    you still insult the wise, in an age
    that appears to surpass the rest
    in knowledge and social customs: what feeling is it,
    then, wretched human race, what thought
    of you finally pierces my heart?
    I don’t know if laughter or pity prevails.

    Sovente in queste rive,
    Che, desolate, a bruno
    Veste il flutto indurato, e par che ondeggi,
    Seggo la notte; e su la mesta landa
    In purissimo azzurro
    Veggo dall’alto fiammeggiar le stelle,
    Cui di lontan fa specchio
    Il mare, e tutto di scintille in giro
    Per lo vòto seren brillare il mondo.
    E poi che gli occhi a quelle luci appunto,
    Ch’a lor sembrano un punto,
    E sono immense, in guisa
    Che un punto a petto a lor son terra e mare
    Veracemente; a cui
    L’uomo non pur, ma questo
    Globo ove l’uomo è nulla,
    Sconosciuto è del tutto; e quando miro
    Quegli ancor più senz’alcun fin remoti
    Nodi quasi di stelle,
    Ch’a noi paion qual nebbia, a cui non l’uomo
    E non la terra sol, ma tutte in uno,
    Del numero infinite e della mole,
    Con l’aureo sole insiem, le nostre stelle
    O sono ignote, o così paion come
    Essi alla terra, un punto
    Di luce nebulosa; al pensier mio
    Che sembri allora, o prole
    Dell’uomo? E rimembrando
    Il tuo stato quaggiù, di cui fa segno
    Il suol ch’io premo; e poi dall’altra parte,
    Che te signora e fine
    Credi tu data al Tutto, e quante volte
    Favoleggiar ti piacque, in questo oscuro
    Granel di sabbia, il qual di terra ha nome,
    Per tua cagion, dell’universe cose
    Scender gli autori, e conversar sovente
    Co’ tuoi piacevolmente, e che i derisi
    Sogni rinnovellando, ai saggi insulta
    Fin la presente età, che in conoscenza
    Ed in civil costume
    Sembra tutte avanzar; qual moto allora,
    Mortal prole infelice, o qual pensiero
    Verso te finalmente il cor m’assale?
    Non so se il riso o la pietà prevale.

  6. says

    Earnest poetry like this, no matter how bad, is supposed to be praised because the writers are so sincere and well-meaning. I can’t, however, bring myself to gush over them. Now, guffaw I can manage.

    Have you read Where Eagles Soar? Click the link to see epic inspirational doggerel. What makes it so bad? I’m not sure. But it is astonishingly wretched. Verily.

  7. Brandon P. says

    “Maybe these xtians are actually Vogons?”

    On the contrary, Vogon poetry is mild by comparison.

  8. Michael Kremer says

    There is, of course, real Christian poetry in the world. Both really Christian and real poetry.

    George Herbert, Gerard Manley Hopkins, TS Eliot, ee cummings, Czeslaw Milosz….

    But of course there would be no fun in poking fun at them.

  9. Steve LaBonne says

    re #8- no shit, Sherlock. I have little doubt that I’m far better acquainted with the greatest of them all, Dante, than you are.

  10. Carlie says

    Damn it, I just ate breakfast!
    Does the eagle ‘poem’ author realize what the eagles do with the rats once they’ve finished their flight?

  11. says

    #10

    Does the eagle ‘poem’ author realize what the eagles do with the rats once they’ve finished their flight?

    They get sent to Heaven? See, there’s no bad side to being devoured by an eagle – if you’re a Christian.

  12. Carlie says

    And sadly, I just clicked over and read the whole poem, and you’re right. The rest of the ‘poem’ is “eat me!”

  13. Michael Kremer says

    Steve Labonne: chances are you’re right. Though I have in fact read the entire Divine Comedy in my life. But it was PZ I was replying to. It was he who chose to link to the worst of Christian poetry.

    By the way, I like the Leopardi poem a lot. Interestingly he was a favorite author of Fr. Luigi Giussani, founder of the Catholic lay movement Communion and Liberation.

  14. Hexxenhammer says

    Weird. I drive by that address every day taking the Hexlette to preschool. Don’t judge New Hope too harshly, there’s a great cafe called Fat Nat’s Eggs and also a comic book shop a block away.

  15. bob koepp says

    Just as intelligent design ain’t science, this stuff ain’t poetry — not by any stretch of poetic imagination.

  16. says

    See, there’s no bad side to being devoured by an eagle – if you’re a Christian.

    I read that particular masterpiece and couldn’t help but think, briefly: damn, but there’s some very familiar and very messed up overtones in that, intentionally or otherwise. Suppose I could get all elaborate about it, try to work out: so, does the writer really wish to be devoured? Is this a reference to the consuming of the self in the ‘greater glory’ of the god certain sects seem so fond of trumpeting as desirable? If so, what do we make, then, of the belief itself, if an adherent of such a belief finds such an image illustrative of the notion: a rodent that actually wants to be torn apart by something large and hungry with talons? And how insightful is this, as an expression of the deeper wish?

    ‘Cos man, if it is, that’s a bit scary. Disgustingly abject, even. Devouring, why, yes please? I’m a tiny rodent. You’re an eagle. Rend and eat me; I’ll try to enjoy the view… Lovely.

    Sadly, however, it’s just as likely it’s just a really clumsily chosen metaphor.

  17. says

    That’s not a bad first line, though. Something could be made of it.

    Rats do not have feathers.
    Rats do not have fins.
    Rats have tails and whiskers
    And they live in wheelie bins.

    Rats do not have feathers.
    Rats have ticks and fleas.
    Rats have mites and parasites
    And like to spread disease.

    Rats do not have feathers
    But teeth with which to gnaw.
    Rats will eat your face off
    Like in Nineteen Eighty-Four.

    Rats do not have feathers
    And so they cannot fly
    It makes them easier to catch
    And bake inside a pie.

  18. Steve LaBonne says

    #21- Sorry to shake you out of your genteel reverie. You may now return to your tea and crumpets.

  19. says

    I also like how the eagle (singular) has beaks (plural).

    Carry me with you
    in your beaks.
    i am your rat.
    ignore my squeaks.
    i am tasty.
    i am chewy.
    Eagle, I’m your rat a touille

  20. Kseniya says

    Miss Prism’s poem is much nicer

    Yes, and the rat is still granted its final and fondest wish, which is to be eaten!

  21. Kseniya says

    LOL @ Miss P, yup I noticed that two. Beaks. Beaks!! Not even Cthulhu has “beaks” … sheesh. (Or so I presume.)

    does the writer really wish to be devoured? Is this a reference to the consuming of the self in the ‘greater glory’ of the god certain sects seem so fond of trumpeting as desirable?

    This “being eaten by god” theme is so familiar. Hey, has anyone read the SF story in which a husband-wife team (both accomplished psychics, she more so) are called to a planet to investigate this big slime mold thing that lives in a cave and is worshipped by the locals? Those people who wish to become Initiates wear a bit of the slime on their heads. The slime slowly eats its way into their minds. These people are revered and envied! Eventually they “become one” with the slime and go to live inside the slime – and are consumed, I guess.

    I think the story was called “Song for Anna” (?) but I can’t remember the author, nor find the book.

  22. EMR says

    #22–What the hell do you know about crumpets?!? I have little doubt that I’m far better acquainted with the greatest of them all (coconut crumpets with lemon butter) than you are.

  23. Dunc says

    Move over, Paula Nancy Millstone Jennings!

    We can but hope that the large intestines of the offending authors do the right thing, as they have done before.

  24. Stogoe says

    Some rats do have feathers;
    Some rats soar the breeze.
    We just call them pigeons –
    They, too, our stomachs quease.

  25. Steve LaBonne says

    Weak, EMR, very weak. But feel free to try again should your wits revive a little.

    Meanwhile, speaking of rats, nobody does it better than Goethe (though the bartleby.com translation leaves something to be desired):

    Once in a cellar lived a rat,
    He feasted there on butter,
    Until his paunch became as fat
    As that of Doctor Luther.
    The cook laid poison for the guest,
    Then was his heart with pangs oppress’d,
    As if his frame love wasted.

    He ran around, he ran abroad,
    Of every puddle drinking.
    The house with rage he scratch’d and gnaw’d,
    In vain,–he fast was sinking;
    Full many an anguish’d bound he gave,
    Nothing the hapless brute could save,
    As if his frame love wasted.

    By torture driven, in open day,
    The kitchen he invaded,
    Convulsed upon the hearth he lay,
    With anguish sorely jaded;
    The poisoner laugh’d, Ha! ha! quoth she,
    His life is ebbing fast, I see,
    As if his frame love wasted.

  26. JM says

    Good grief, that really is bad:- no meter, no structure, no metaphor, no similie.

    But I what I really can’t forgive is:-

    > He misses you so much, dear.

    “dear”???? The last refuge of the poor rhymer who wants to couple it with some other commonplace, weak, meaningless word that accidently ends up at the end of a line. Normally it means a lazy attempt to salvage lazy work.

    But in this case, it doesn’t even form a rhyme with anything. What is that about?

  27. Kseniya says

    Scones of ginger
    Dry but sweet
    Were my favorite
    Breakfast treat.
    Whence this hollow
    In my gut
    Craving crumpets
    Coconut?

  28. Maureen Lycaon says

    Kseniya, #27 — It’s titled “A Song For Lya”, from the collection of short stories of the same name, by George R. R. Martin. Yes, THAT Martin, the same one who is currently giving us the splendid “A Song of Ice and Fire” series. It was among his very earliest work, dating back to the 1970s. The original cover of the paperback is . . . creepy.

    The same anthology, however, also had “With Morning Comes Mistfall,” in which scientists discovering the truth behind a local legend on a recently colonized planet basically destroy the beauty and wonder of it — at least for one man.

  29. Barn Owl says

    Eagle came down the walk
    He did not know I saw
    He bit the Christian rat in halves
    And ate the moron, raw

  30. says

    Rats do not have feathers
    And so they cannot fly
    It makes them easier to catch
    And bake inside a pie.

    Bravo!

    This rat has no feathers
    Nor beak, nor wings
    And tho’ it has little use
    For all of these things
    It thinks on these absences
    And is deeply depressed;
    Seeing an eagle
    It is duly impressed:

    “Why look at those feathers
    How proudly it flies!
    Look at those talons
    How steeply it dives!
    Just look at those eyes
    With such cunning invested…”
    The rat grovels and fawns
    As it is ingested.”

  31. Faithful Reader says

    All those 17th century English mystic poets are wonderful to read, starting with John Donne. This dreck resembles such works the way the average Xian contemporary music resembles Bach.

    As someone somewhere said, “Why should the Devil have all the good tunes [or poems]?

  32. Tulse says

    Yes, THAT Martin, the same one who is currently giving us the splendid “A Song of Ice and Fire” series.

    Not so much “currently” at the moment, dagnabbit! George, finish the next book already!

  33. Der Bruno Stroszek says

    I don’t get it. We should worship God because if we do, he’ll eat us alive? I coul write a better Christian apologetic poem than that, and I’m an atheist. To wit:

    Rats do not have feathers
    They do not have wings
    They also don’t have laser eyes
    And many other things
    That would make it harder
    To squash the bastards flat
    Rats aren’t indestructible –
    And thank the Lord for that!

  34. Taz says

    How can you deny the genius of “General Jesus is Coming” with the oft-repeated line:
    “Eh! Eh! Eh! Eh! Eh! Eh! Eh! Eh!”
    followed in one spot by
    “Hear the sound of music”
    Is this what inspired PZ to come up with the cat-in-a-woodchipper metaphor?

  35. Rasputin says

    “Eagle came down the walk
    He did not know I saw
    He bit the Christian rat in halves
    And ate the moron, raw”

    This is phenomenal.

  36. Graham says

    Come! Come! My Baby! Come! My Baby!

    Hmmm. Sounds like somebody doing a very unconvincing job of faking an orgasm.

  37. Phy says

    “General Jesus” probably sounds better in the original Klingon. Or, y’know, whatever other crazy moon language it was originally in. It just smells so much like an artless, direct translation.

  38. Nadeen says

    Not every cleric
    Alone praises god
    Consider Robbin Herrick
    Who often gave the ladies a nod

    Upon Julia’s Clothes

    Whenas in silks my Julia goes
    Then, then (methinks) how sweetly flows
    That liquefaction of her clothes

    Next, when I cast mine eyes and see
    That brave vibration each way free;
    O how that glittering taketh me!

    P.Z. that stuff you reproduced for us is doggerel-not poetry-and yes so is my poor little rhyme.

  39. Margaret says

    I wonder if I can get it added to the original christian site…

    Oh, yes Cuttlefish. Please try. Not that your far superior effort belongs in such trashy company.

  40. says

    Come! Come! My Baby! Come! My Baby!

    …You’re my butterfly; sugar, baby.

    Oy, shitty Christian poetry that sounds just like equally shitty ’90s white-rap. I guess New Hope is the real “Crazy Town.”

    Incidentally:
    Rats do not have feathers,
    Rats do not have wings,
    Rats have beady little eyes:
    Such complicated things.
    Birds do not have rat-tails,
    Soaring in the sky,
    And those facts are objective proof
    Of Darwinism’s lie.

    Hey, this Christian poetry stuff is easy! I wonder if this site would accept my submissions. “There once was a father named Lot…”

  41. says

    #40
    I don’t get it. We should worship God because if we do, he’ll eat us alive?

    Isn’t that very close to the message of the book of Job? Or am I confusing the Bible and the Necronomicon again?

  42. says

    Is anyone else hearing “Come ma lady, come come ma lady” playing when they read that last, uh, poem? Wasn’t this on South Park?

  43. M says

    I think that I shall never see,
    An (ID/hyperChristian/uberrightwing/creationist/ID again) troll much smarter than a tree….

  44. noncarborundum says

    Phy wrote:

    “General Jesus” probably sounds better in the original Klingon.

    Indeed it does:

    chenmoHwi’ chuS’ugh yIQoy!
    yIghoS! yIghoS! ghuwI’! yIghoS! ghuwI’!
    DurI’ Sa’ je’SuS!
    QI’tu’ ‘In tIQoy!
    che’ parmaq chut!
    lopno’ Dun! tIqnagh rur Je’SuS tlhogh qoch tIngvo’ ‘evDaq chanDaq Supmo’!
    chechqu’ ghaH!

    Phy wrote:

    . . . crazy moon language . . .

    You dare to insult a Klingon?

  45. says

    What about pigeons? Pigeons being “rats with wings”. Ahem:

    Let the pigeons soar!
    O’er the teeming waste land of urban gore
    Whence from Heav’n D’vine acidic tears do pour
    For every sperm abandoned in a condom on the floor …

    Amen.

  46. RamblinDude says

    It’s a shame you can’t hear this Christian poetry as it was originally spoken–it loses so much in the translation. Unfortunately, you are atheists and cannot appreciate its wit, its subtlety, its life affirming message. And the humor! Oh, the humor! If you could but read and truly understand. But none of you speak in tongues, do you?

    “Come! Come! My Baby! Come! My Baby!” Priceless!

  47. David Marjanović says

    Comment 53 seems to be the only one who has understood that there is but one thing we can hope for: to be eaten first.

    noncarborundum, is there a babelfish-style translator somewhere online, or did you do that yourself? In the latter case, let me express my deep respect, and let me blame you for the capital J in the 2nd-to-last line. }}:-)

  48. David Marjanović says

    Comment 53 seems to be the only one who has understood that there is but one thing we can hope for: to be eaten first.

    noncarborundum, is there a babelfish-style translator somewhere online, or did you do that yourself? In the latter case, let me express my deep respect, and let me blame you for the capital J in the 2nd-to-last line. }}:-)

  49. noncarborundum says

    David M:

    I did it my own self. Sorry about the J. Oh the embarrassment.

    It could have been worse; I almost posted that with a couple of lower-case i’s too.

  50. says

    #52, that opening line is too good to pass up. Here’s my first take:

    There once was a father named Lot
    whose wife was transformed into salt
    his daughters, distressed
    got him drunk and undressed
    and did things they probably ought not.

  51. Gav says

    Yeah, well, pretty soft targets.

    I’d add R S Thomas to the list of readable religious poets. His style is quite easy to parody but I’ll spare you this.

    “Cat in woodchipper” recalls story that Brahms used to shoot cats from his window with a little bow and arrow and carefully transcribe their dying cries into his musical compositions, although this might have been a malicious joke put about by Wagner.

  52. Buffybot says

    Makeitstopmakeitstopmakeitstop.

    My great-grandfather self-published a lot of horrible religious poetry, thus driving all of his descendents to atheism. I’m told that when the old bastard died they had a huge bonfire of all the unsold copies.

    One is called ‘Evolution’ and has the lines

    From out of the mud and slime
    Came crawling a myriad of things
    With Fur! And with Feathers! And Wings!

  53. mothra says

    Religious hymns are all ‘poetry.’
    Happily it is sooo easy to improve lyrics.

    Rocks of ages

    Rock of a-ges, cleft for thee, fossil re-cord there to see.
    Tri-lo-bite, T. rex, Lu-cy, in layered stone, success-ive-ly.
    Split by wa-ter, lands up-hurled, historic ta-pes-try unfurled.
    Rock of a-ges, cleft for thee, mar-vel-ous stratigraphy.

    Clock of a-ges, DNA, genetic mar-kers of our way.
    Mutations neu-tral, accum-u-late, tick onward at a constant rate.
    Split by en-zymes, helix un-sealed, parental lin-e-age revealed.
    Clock of a-ges, DNA, tree of life in grand ar-ray.

    Compar-a-tive ana-tomy, a science called morph-o-log-y.
    Walrus flip-per, wing of bird, in human hands, the bones recur.
    Tadpoles, humans, snakes, and whales, in embryo- all have their tails.
    Compar-a-tive ana-tomy, shows our common an-ces-try.

    Fos-sils, genes, morph-o-log-y, on one result they all agree.
    Studies in-depend-ent-ly, give the same phy-log-en-y.
    Three sci-en-ces: a u-nit-y, light of reason: a tri-nit-y.
    What about the-ol-o-gy? Left behind- a chim-pan-zee!

  54. MLH says

    Nabokov said poetry should be at least as well written as prose. He would, of course, beat himself to death with Humbert Humbert’s diary rather than read this crap.

  55. noncarborundum says

    It looks as if the Vogons have been demoted.

    Well, okay . . . but you have to be the one to tell the Klingons.

  56. AlanWCan says

    A big empty whole you will see. So, is that godse.cx then? (cue sounds of brain scrubbing…)

  57. says

    I don’t know, the one about boozing it up in heaven was sort of OK. Weak on prosodic construction, as so much modern poetry is, of course. On the whole, though, this guy can certainly hold his head up next to William McGonagall.

    Steve @9,

    point taken, but your interlocutor (who I believe has trolled here before, though “troll” might be a bit strong) is right this time. PZ’s godly poetaster deserves ridicule not because he is Christian, but because he sucks (which seems to have been your point as well, so I am not sure you and Kremer are actually in disagreement).

    The 17th c. Anglican clergyman and religious poet Thomas Traherne, for example, wrote about a sense of wonder at existence that I think any thoughtful atheist would share. Be that as it may, he wrote beautifully:

    A Stranger here,
    Strange things doth meet, strange Glory see,
    Strange Treasures lodg’d in this fair World appear,
    Strange all and New to me:
    But that they mine should be who Nothing was,
    That Strangest is of all; yet brought to pass.

    (from “The Salutation”)

    You mentioned Goethe on rats. When it comes to vermin, I much favour arachnids over rodents, so permit me to cite this snippet from the West-Östlicher Divan, in which Goethe at once affirms the existence of God and rejects the idea of a Great Chain of Being with man at the apex:

    Als ich einmal eine Spinne erschlagen,
    Dacht ich, ob ich das wohl gesollt?
    Hat Gott ihr doch wie mir gewollt
    Einen Anteil an diesen Tagen!

    For those of you who do not read German, I offer this dog-translation, which ruins the metre but conveys (poorly) the sense:

    I smashed a spider late one night,
    Then thought: now really, was that right?
    God wanted her to have (you see)
    Her place in this world, just like me.

    The take-home from all this is: abandoning theism might be desirable for any number of reasons, but none of those have to do with producing great art; and Goethe was noble enough to recognise that he shouldn’t go about smashing spiders.

  58. says

    The take-home from all this is: abandoning theism might be desirable for any number of reasons, but none of those have to do with producing great art;

    Conversely, religious people have produced great art and much of it about or in service of religion, but that is no reason to keep religion around. The amazing art that has come about due to the church’s resources and inspiration says nothing about the truth or value of the religion, but it does speak to the incredible, individual, natural talent of the human artists who produced those works.

    The fact that something–religion, war, disease, inequality–has led to great works of art doesn’t mean it has any intrinsic value of its own.

  59. David Harmon says

    As a more modern antidote for this stuff, I refer you to Making Light. Both their open threads, and the trailing ends of topic threads, tend to collect lots of impromptu poems. They write everything from limericks to villanelles, but even their doggerel is better than this stuff. Dave Bonta at Via Negativa is also pretty good, with poems, photos (mostly nature), and assorted musings.

  60. Dahan says

    Gghhhaa!! What putrid stuff. There must be thousands of things to take issue with in this drivel, but here’s one I’ll point out. The poem “The Soldier’s Song”, it’s about a Marine. Now a Soldier is not a Marine, Soldiers are in the Army. If you don’t even know that, perhaps you shouldn’t be writing poems about them, and trying to equate service to your country with loving god. Like I said, one of thousands of things wrong with this, but a pet pieve of mine.

  61. Steve LaBonne says

    The amazing art that has come about due to the church’s resources and inspiration says nothing about the truth or value of the religion, but it does speak to the incredible, individual, natural talent of the human artists who produced those works.

    Two (of many possible) data points in support of this:
    1)Goethe’s famous quip that he didn’t care how much harm the Church had done, as long as he could use its symbols in his poems.
    2) Two of the most spectacular 19th century works of “religious” art- the Requiems of Berlioz and Verdi- were created by atheists.

  62. speedwell says

    Two of the most spectacular 19th century works of “religious” art- the Requiems of Berlioz and Verdi- were created by atheists.

    Back when I was a church member and went to a huge church on a hill, we performed the Brahms German Requiem, that the composer wrote upon the death of his much-beloved mother. My music teacher told me Brahms was a humanist and not particularly religious, therefore he had picked Bible verses of comfort for the living rather than judgement for the dead.

  63. speedwell says

    And I didn’t want to post this before checking it out, because I wasn’t sure I remembered it properly… but the number of times Jesus is mentioned in the German Requiem is… zero.

  64. Steve LaBonne says

    Yes, I should have mentioned the German Requiem as well (though I don’t think it’s as great a piece as the other two).

  65. MikeM says

    I can imagine Monty Python singing these songs. Half of them dressed as Vikings, the other half in drag. Perhaps out on a bridge in suburban London.

    Where are they in our hour of need?

  66. MikeM says

    What I meant to say was, performing these poems as songs. Set to some nice, generic Gospel-sounding tunes.

    Still with Python (Monty), though.