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The Theological Significance of Horror Stories
This original version of this post was aired more than 10 years ago at the blog ThinkingThroughChristianity.com, which sadly is no more.
While some Christians debate the ethics of celebrating Halloween, I think that, if nothing else, the Halloween season is a good time to reflect on the theological significance of horror. I’m not an expert on the subject, but that probably won’t matter since most of you probably didn’t know until now that there are any experts. But there are. I know of two, or at least two people who are somewhere in the vicinity–Matt Cardin and Kim Paffenroth.
I only know these gentlemen through cyberspace, although Cardin happens to work for my former part-time employer. I haven’t had the chance to read any of his stuff yet, but I’ve read three works of fiction by Paffenroth. He has some nonfiction on the subject which I also haven’t read, but I think I may have the gist of this Christianity and horror thing figured out. Here’s the main idea: Horror fiction illustrates the sinful human condition. This is usually done allegorically, though it doesn’t have to be.
I’ll illustrate with a few examples.
- Example #1: Robert Louis Stevenson’s The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. The Christian rock band Petra figured this one out in their 2003 album Jekyll and Hyde. As they say in the title song, “Sometimes I feel like Jekyll and Hyde. Two men are fighting a war inside.” Whether Stevenson intended to or not, he created a terrific allegory for the words of the apostle Paul in Romans 7.
- Example #2: VeggieTales. This is not your typical horror fiction, but it makes the same point. In Larry-Boy! and the Fib from Outer Space and Larry-Boy and the Rumor Weed, the everyday sins of fibbing and gossiping are personified as hideous monsters with the power to destroy an entire city. At least one of the monsters is capable of eating children; if that’s not creepy enough, you should know that it was children who made the monsters grow in the first place. (To be fair to the children, they didn’t create them; they just made them grow.) But this is how sin works; we indulge in it for our own interests, and pretty soon it ends up eating us alive. These VeggieTales episodes focus on the sins of lying and spreading rumors. Sin’s power to destroy is only more obvious with some other sins: illegal drug use, drunkenness, adultery.
- Example #3: Paffenroth’s Dying to Live: A Novel of Life Among the Undead, a fascinating book that deserves a fuller review (around to writing which I may get someday). Now I’m not recommending you read this book, not only because I don’t know who you are but also because this is a book to be handled with care—for several reasons. But there are some people in the world, most of them zombie enthusiasts, who could profit from reading it.
I think there are two basic lessons to this book, but I can only cover one of them here. To make a long story short, Paffenroth’s book helped me see how zombies portray human sin; they are carnal images of our spiritual condition as described by the Bible. Most zombies suffer from a creepy compulsion to do harm to people. This is what we human beings do to each other on an everyday basis—albeit usually with sarcasm, slander, gossip, a withering look, an unduly critical tone of voice, or something else not so physically violent. We can fight our compulsion to do harm; we can keep it within limits; but it always causes us to misbehave in the end.
Were a zombie conscious and reflective, it would agree with the apostle Paul. Romans 7 again:
“I do not understand what I do. For what I want to do I do not do, but what I hate I do. What a wretched man I am! Who will rescue me from this body of death?” (Romans 7:15 and 7:24, New International Version)
Now I am not saying that Robert Louis Stevenson and other creators of horror fiction are consciously trying to illustrate the sinful human condition. All I am saying is that they frequently succeed.
Published in Religion and Philosophy
Hey, did you guys know that Dante’s Inferno was inspired by an actual zombie outbreak in medieval Europe?
My go-to zombie passage has always been Ephesians 2, we were the living dead.
Somehow you made me think of this song I’ve never even heard but remember the name of.
The line dividing good and evil cuts through the heart of every human being. And who is willing to destroy a piece of his own heart?
— Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, The Gulag Archipelago
What an unusual and creative piece. Ty.
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/11563.Danse_Macabre
The only thing Stephen King wrote that I thought was worth reading. Been so long, I can’t comment in any worthwhile way. Still, I remember a few things: 1) His take on the move Carrie and its connection to the rise of feminism, 2) the 1950s movies that addressed the fears associated with the atomic age, 3) his comments about people who claim to be completely unaffected by horror movies such as The Night of the Living Dead.
It was written before King went off his rocker.
King’s On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft is a surprisingly good work.
It’s not a big horror fan, and I stay away from the contemporary slasher gore-porn as a rule. (I don’t need any more nightmare fodder than I already have.)
The essay makes a number of good points, and I’d like to see it promoted to the Main Feed.
Aside from the gratuitous and hyper-graphic nature of modern horror, what disturbs me most is its dominant theme of nihilism; ultimately, evil is an end unto itself, and it always triumphs (even if one teenage girl gets away to tell the tale…)
I will be teaching “Gothic Horror Novel” Spring 2025 at Liberty. I have been writing about horror and teaching Gothic horror novels for decades. I tell people the genre is closest to the Christian worldview for at least two reasons that appear in every horror movie: (1) there is a supernatural world to which we must give an account and (2) evil exists and must be defeated. I’m always pleased to see other believers who believe horror is important. Of course, I am not surprised at all that my friend Mark would have come to the same conclusion years ago. :)
Macbeth. It’s the horror story we need. Not the one we deserve.
Yes, I certainly agree with your first point without any hesitation. And I also agree with your second point (that evil exists and must be defeated). However, in contemporary postmodern horror, evil is not ultimately defeated. Rather, it eventually wins; the zombie hoard can be held at bay for a little while, but not forever. The psychotic butcher torturing the teenagers (most of whom seem to secretly deserve their horrendous fate) always survives to reappear in the next sequel or episode. And Hell is represented as a place where some poor losers suffer eternally, but for those in power, the demons, well they actually have a pretty bitchin’ time.