Marilynne Robinson’s novel, “Housekeeping” and the movie that resulted from it has really stuck with me. Robinson has a deep spiritual dimension to her life and work because she knows a lot about spiritual depths. One must in order to write like she does, and in order to gain the respect of someone like Barack Obama so that in his Presidency he flew to Des Moines, Iowa to interview her. That is right! For him, to interview her!
One line from “Housekeeping” grabbed me when I read it 25 years ago, and even today tugs at my soul, “Need can blossom into all the compensations it requires.” Need, or emptiness, is what makes us human and is what the Christian tradition has in mind with the doctrine of kenosis, the “self-emptying” of Jesus; this “self-emptying” means “to making nothing.” It is the knowledge, and experiencing of our Absence, that represents a developing familiarity with the innermost regions of our soul. Avoiding this neediness/emptiness is what our persona was designed to cover up until we could find the maturity to allow it to become porous a bit so that our innermost being could come to light. Shakespeare put it like this, “Within be rich, without be fed no more.”
Our materialist, consumer culture offers us a steady array of “stuff” to invest in, to “feed upon,” and avoid this redemptive inner core. And speaking from experience, religion can offer its own version of “stuff” when dogma and sterile ritual are relied on rather than doing the soul work which would allow this dogma and ritual to have a meaningful impact in one’s life.
