Friday, December 7, 2007
Richard Roberts told
students at Oral Roberts University that he did not want to resign as president
of the scandal-plagued evangelical school, but he did so because God insisted.
—Associated Press
There I was, calmly enjoying some Thanksgiving
leftovers and offering some divine gratitude for this truly fine '04 Pinot when
suddenly boom, there was God, right across the table, helping Himself to
some stuffing and the choicest hunks of dark meat, which He totally knows is my
favorite. Clearly, He wanted my attention.
"Oh hey, it's you," I said,
feigning nonchalance, as if this sort of thing happens to me every day (I
always like to throw God off a bit, given how He's so accustomed to those
melodramatic, fall-to-your-knees-in-terror reactions He always gets from the
nutball evangelicals whenever He swings through their nightmares in his classic
fire/brimstone persona. That always cracks Him up). "What's up?"
"Oh, you know, same ol' same
ol'," God muttered, His voice sounding like an ocean playing a cello
concerto in a black hole. He grabbed my pricey Pinot and chugged nearly the
entire thing like it was Trader Joe's house brand, His long, well-manicured,
beautifully feminine fingers shiny with meat grease. "Just sorta bored,
hanging around the universe, putting out little fires. How you doing? You get
those sexy new floor cushions yet? How's the car running?"
Something was wrong. This wasn't like
God at all. "Wait, what? You came all the way here from the belly of the
cosmos, ignoring the unimaginable dance of astral forces and the infinite
conundrums of colliding galaxies, not to mention the constant pitter-patter of
little questions about the meaning of war and death and suffering and life
itself, and you want to talk about home decor? What's going on?"
"Oh, you know Me, just trying to
keep it real, visit My peeps personally now and then, offer advice like some
sort of sniveling lawyer, like some sort of stupid little shrink who's speaking
only to you, at the expense of everyone else."
Now I knew he was being
sarcastic. At least, I think He was. You can never really tell with God. I
mean, just look at Pluto. Or New Jersey. Or Tom Cruise.
Then it hit me. "Wait, is this
about that obnoxious preacher's kid? That Roberts guy?" I'd just read
about how Oral Roberts' wildly spoiled son Richard, the odious televangelist
who headed Oral Roberts University and who's right now being sued for allegedly
swiping mountains of cash from the financially strapped school to pay for
lavish personal crap like shopping sprees and a private stable of horses and
the repeated remodel of his home (11
times in 14 years!), and for flying his kid to the Bahamas on the school's
private jet as his wife spends tens of thousands of dollars in university funds
on clothes and sends furtive text messages to underage boys. You know, the
usual.
And oh yes: I also recall that
Roberts has officially claimed that God spoke to him in person, and instructed
him to resign from the corrupt, horribly managed, deeply creepy university,
over Roberts' own protests. Ah ha.
God sighed grumpily, sounding like
two dump trucks mating in a hailstorm. "Look, you claim to be some sort of
journalist, right? This little worm actually invoked My name as an excuse,
dared to say that he talked to Me and that I insisted he resign. Insisted! Me!
The f-ing nerve. I don't insist on anything, except maybe a little backrub from
the cherubim at the M51 whirlpool galaxy now and then. That little scab is
getting a first class ticket to Impotenceland, you can trust Me on that."
"Well, good. But I don't see how
I ..."
"But that's not the worst part.
The worst part is the lemmings, the crowd of wide-eyed students, they were
eating it up! Actually weeping and cheering him on, fully believing every word,
even as he wiped away his crocodile tears with a goddamn handkerchief he bought
from a gay bathhouse in Vegas using their tuition money."
Then God shot me that sweet,
imploring look that always makes me melt. "So here's the plan: I want you
to write up something scathing and funny and pointed about how God visited you,
in person, and you broke bread and shared a nice bottle of host's blood or
whatnot, and I told you in no uncertain terms that Richard Roberts is a
world-class charlatan with a rabid case of elephantiasis of the false spirit.
"I want you to ring the alarm,
raise the roof, send out an S.O.S., put a message in a bottle, whatever the
hell it is you writer people do. I'm getting tired of this."
I was, I have to say, a little taken
aback. This wasn't like God, so spiteful, so easily annoyed by such petty,
meaningless human shrapnel as Roberts. We usually laugh and shrug off stories
like this, then move on to talk about, say, Buddhism, or the deeper meanings of
tantric philosophy, the best meditation techniques to help you get past a nasty
port wine headache. That sort of thing.
I had to ask. "OK, I give.
What's this really all about? Because hell, they've been invoking Your name as
an excuse for a couple thousand years, stamping it like a bad logo across
everything from slaughtering pagans to detesting gays to screaming in fear of
the human vagina to launching all manner of brutal war and torture and
righteous moral crusade."
God just looked at me sidelong, and
polished off the rest of the wine in a single sip.
I went on. "Look, You know
better than anyone that Roberts is nothing more than a flea on the great
sheepskin rug of human belief. But You know I'll try. As for the gaggle of
students in his cultish thrall, well, I'll absolutely keep doing everything I
can to inspire them to wake up one day with a Burning Man ticket in one hand
and a well-licked copy of Rumi's collected poems in the other, shuddering with
mad desire to drop some ecstasy and join in a dawn fire ritual and see, well, the real You."
God smiled. In a flash, the room went
dark, and suddenly I felt a rush of warm air flow over me like molten honey,
soothing my bones and penetrating my very blood and forcing me to close my eyes
in what I can only describe as ecstatic cellular orgasm. It was, you might say,
pretty nice.
When I opened my eyes again, God had
morphed into Her other form, the divine female, the true ruling principle of
the universe, skin like moonlight and eyes like diamonds and a massive mane of
fiery red hair and a figure that could melt the ice planets of the Hyperion
cluster in the Artemis nebulae. I mean, wow.
Her voice made the ground tremble
beneath my feet. "You know what? You're absolutely right," She said,
as the cellos changed into violins. "Guess I just needed that hot kick of
divine reconnection. Or you know, maybe you did." Then She winked
at me, and 10 million birds fainted with delight. "I mean, we are
co-creators of each other, after all."
And just like that, She was gone.
When I regained my senses, I saw that my wine bottle was full again, and there
was a full plate of dark meat, awaiting my divine gratitude. Damn, She's good.