Barbara Brown Taylor Faces the Darkness

U.S. Religion Darkness is often treated as evil, a vast unknown and the Ultimate spiritual enemy. But as Barbara Brown Taylor believes, it may save us all Marco Grob for TIME

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From the moment God declared, Let there be light, Scripture christened light as holy and condemned darkness to hell. The Christian liturgy soaked in the theme in the centuries that followed. The Book of Common Prayer addresses God as O Light and begs, Be our light in the darkness, O Lord. Hymns followed suit, from Amazing Grace to the hit In the Light from Christian hip-hop band dc Talk.

But theologian Barbara Brown Taylor sees it differently. As impossible as it is to imagine faith without light, it is equally hard to imagine a world without darkness. We are taught to fear darkness as children, she says, when parents line the halls to the bathroom with nightlights to scare away the closet monsters. As we grow older, the monsters take a different shape: darkness descends with the call that a loved one has cancer, months of unemployment, a child with an addiction or an unanswered prayer.

The preacher in Taylor points out that darkness was often the setting for humanitys closest encounters with the divine. God appeared to Abraham in the night and promised him descendants more numerous than the stars. The exodus from Egypt happened at night. God met Moses in the thick darkness atop Mount Sinai to hand down the Ten Commandments. Jesus was born beneath a star and resurrected in the darkness of a cave.

This appears in the April 28, 2014 issue of TIME.

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Barbara Brown Taylor Faces the Darkness

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