Monday, April 6, 2026

The Stories That Save Us

Introduction

Religious traditions are often approached as systems of belief, collections of doctrines that make claims about the nature of reality. Yet long before doctrines were codified, religion existed as story. Communities preserved narratives that helped them interpret suffering, responsibility, loss, and hope within patterns that allowed life to remain intelligible. These stories did not remove uncertainty, but they provided continuity across uncertainty. They allowed individuals to situate themselves within a world that could still be understood even when events disrupted expectation.

As this project has developed, religion has increasingly appeared not primarily as a repository of supernatural explanations, but as an evolving archive of narratives through which human beings attempt to preserve meaning across rupture. Moral frameworks shift, institutions adapt, and beliefs change, yet the need for continuity persists. Religion functions as one of the primary cultural locations in which this work of continuity has historically been undertaken.

The examples explored in this essay initially appeared unrelated. An early Christian story of a cross that speaks. A tradition describing Christ descending to the dead. A contemporary practice in which the beginning of a marriage is reconsidered in order to permit a different future. Yet each reflects a similar narrative impulse. When events threaten to render life incoherent, the story expands. Religious communities preserve interpretive frameworks that allow disruption to be incorporated into meaning rather than permitted to dissolve it.

The persistence of religion may therefore be understood not only in terms of belief, but in terms of narrative necessity. Humans continue to tell stories in which return remains imaginable.

Religion as Narrative

Before religion becomes doctrine, it begins as story.

Long before formal creeds attempted to define belief with precision, communities preserved narratives that helped them interpret the instability of human life. These stories did not emerge primarily to explain the mechanics of the universe, but to situate human experience within patterns that rendered suffering intelligible and action meaningful. Religious traditions organize memory, loss, hope, and obligation into sequences that allow individuals to understand themselves as participants in an unfolding drama rather than as isolated moments in time.

The persistence of religion may therefore be explained less by the durability of supernatural claims than by the enduring human need for narrative continuity. Individuals require some sense that their lives form a coherent arc. When disruption occurs, the story must expand in order to preserve meaning. Religion provides language through which communities interpret both the stability and instability of existence.

Alasdair MacIntyre famously observed that humans are storytelling beings who understand their actions within traditions that extend across generations. Identity, in this sense, is not merely an internal possession but a narrative achievement. A life becomes intelligible when it can be told. The question is never simply what has happened, but how events relate to one another in a meaningful sequence.

Similarly, Paul Ricoeur argued that time becomes human when it is narrated. Experience alone does not produce understanding. Understanding emerges when events are configured into a story that explains how the present emerged from the past and gestures toward possible futures. Without narrative structure, events remain fragments.

Religious traditions function as repositories of such narrative structures. They preserve stories of exile and return, failure and forgiveness, death and restoration. These recurring patterns suggest that religion addresses not only metaphysical questions but existential ones. Humans seek assurance that disruption does not render life meaningless. Stories provide interpretive continuity when circumstances appear discontinuous.

Clifford Geertz described religion as a system of symbols that establishes powerful and enduring moods by presenting conceptions of order that appear uniquely realistic. Symbols operate narratively. They do not merely communicate information; they situate the individual within a world that appears structured and interpretable. Religious language therefore often becomes symbolic when literal description proves insufficient to express the depth of human concern.

Across traditions, similar narrative movements appear repeatedly:

fall and return

captivity and liberation

estrangement and reconciliation

death and renewal

These patterns do not remove suffering, but they provide frameworks through which suffering may be understood as part of a larger story rather than as evidence of chaos. Religious narratives do not always resolve tension. Instead, they preserve the possibility that tension may be meaningful.

The essays in this project have increasingly suggested that religion may be understood as a collaborative human effort to construct meaning capable of surviving disruption. Moral frameworks evolve because communities continually reinterpret the stories through which they understand themselves. Meaning is not discovered fully formed but developed through sustained engagement with inherited narratives. Religious traditions preserve these narratives, not because they eliminate uncertainty, but because they allow individuals and communities to continue acting within uncertainty.

When life fractures, the story must expand.

The following sections explore three examples in which religious storytelling attempts to preserve continuity across rupture. The image of a cross that speaks, the tradition of Christ descending to the dead, and the institutional practice of annulment each demonstrate how religious communities reinterpret events in order to sustain the possibility that belonging remains available even after disruption.

The Talking Cross

Among the more striking images preserved in early Christian literature is the speaking cross described in the Gospel of Peter. In this account of the resurrection, witnesses observe not only the risen Christ emerging from the tomb, but the cross itself following behind him. When a voice from heaven asks whether the message has been proclaimed to the dead, the cross responds affirmatively.

The image is unexpected, even unsettling. A cross does not speak. Yet the narrative insists that it must.

The talking cross reveals something important about the storytelling character of early Christianity. The crucifixion presented a profound narrative crisis. The expected trajectory of messianic hope was interrupted by execution. The apparent defeat of the central figure threatened the coherence of the story itself. If the story ended at the cross, then the meaning of everything that preceded it would be called into question.

The symbol therefore becomes animated because the story requires continuation.

The cross speaks because silence would imply that the narrative has collapsed. The cross speaks because the event cannot remain merely an instance of political violence. It must become part of a larger interpretive framework capable of sustaining meaning beyond the moment of rupture.

The early Christian imagination responded to this narrative tension through symbolic expansion. Rather than abandoning the story, the tradition extended the significance of the cross beyond its historical function as an instrument of execution. The cross becomes a witness. The cross becomes a participant. The cross becomes a narrative voice.

Such symbolic development is not unusual within religious traditions. When historical events strain the limits of literal description, narrative language often becomes more imaginative rather than less. Symbols allow communities to articulate meanings that cannot easily be expressed through empirical observation alone.

Northrop Frye observed that mythic language operates through recurring symbolic patterns that express fundamental human concerns. The speaking cross reflects this mythic dimension. The story does not ask the reader to imagine wood literally producing speech. Instead, the story suggests that the meaning associated with the cross cannot remain confined to the past. The significance of the event continues to unfold.

Similarly, early Christian interpreters often read scripture as layered with meanings that exceeded the surface of the text. Origen of Alexandria described sacred writings as containing depths of meaning accessible through interpretive engagement. Narrative symbols invite reflection rather than demand literal acceptance.

The talking cross therefore illustrates how religious communities preserve meaning through narrative imagination. The symbol becomes active because the story must remain alive. The cross does not merely mark the location of death. It becomes a sign that the story continues to speak into the present.

Within the framework developed in this project, the speaking cross demonstrates how religious storytelling responds to rupture. When events threaten narrative coherence, the story expands. Symbolic language allows communities to reinterpret disruption in ways that preserve continuity.

The story refuses to end in silence.

The Harrowing of Hell

If the speaking cross preserves meaning beyond the moment of crucifixion, the tradition known as the Harrowing of Hell extends the narrative further still. The story, preserved most fully in the Gospel of Nicodemus and anticipated in the First Epistle of Peter, imagines Christ descending to the realm of the dead between crucifixion and resurrection. There he encounters Adam, Eve, the patriarchs, the prophets, and the generations who lived before the historical appearance of Jesus.

The narrative addresses a theological problem that emerges once the story of salvation becomes historically situated. If salvation is mediated through Christ, what becomes of those who lived before Christ? Are entire generations excluded simply because they were born too early? The tension is temporal rather than moral. The difficulty lies not in failure of belief, but in the impossibility of belief prior to the emergence of the belief itself.

The Harrowing of Hell responds to this problem narratively rather than philosophically.

Christ enters the past.

The story moves backward in time in order to preserve the coherence of its claim to universality.

The image is powerful. Gates are broken. Chains fall away. Adam is lifted by the wrist from the grave. The first human becomes the first restored. The story reaches back to its beginning in order to reaffirm continuity between origin and redemption.

Early Christian theologians recognized the significance of this narrative movement. Irenaeus of Lyons described Christ as recapitulating the history of humanity, gathering the fragmented narrative of human existence into a renewed unity. In this interpretive framework, the story of salvation is not limited to a single historical moment but extends across the entirety of human time.

Similarly, Gregory of Nyssa emphasized that what is assumed may be healed, suggesting that restoration requires participation in the full scope of human experience. The descent into death reflects the conviction that exclusion cannot remain the final word in the story.

The Harrowing of Hell therefore functions as narrative repair of historical discontinuity. The story acknowledges the problem created by temporal limitation and resolves it through imaginative expansion. The community refuses to accept that chronology alone determines belonging.

The past itself becomes reinterpretable.

Within the conceptual framework of this project, the Harrowing of Hell illustrates how religious storytelling preserves continuity when the structure of the story appears threatened by historical contingency. The narrative does not deny the problem of time. Instead, it absorbs the problem into the story itself.

The story grows in order to sustain meaning.

This movement parallels the broader human tendency to revisit earlier chapters of life in light of later understanding. Individuals often reinterpret past events so that present identity remains coherent. Memory itself becomes a form of narrative revision, allowing earlier experiences to participate in meanings that were not fully visible at the time.

The Harrowing of Hell expresses this interpretive impulse in symbolic form. The story insists that exclusion, even when rooted in history, need not remain permanent. Belonging may be extended retroactively. The narrative remains open.

The gates do not remain closed.

Annulment as Institutional Storytelling

As a divorced person, I initially found it difficult to understand why two individuals, each previously married, would seek annulments rather than simply accepting the civil reality of divorce. Divorce already provides a socially recognized narrative resolution. A marriage once existed and now no longer does. The story acknowledges that something real occurred, even if that reality ultimately proved unsustainable.

Annulment operates differently.

Rather than narrating the end of a marriage, annulment revisits its beginning. It asks whether the conditions necessary for a sacramental union were ever fully present. The claim is not that the relationship failed, but that something essential to the meaning of the relationship may have been absent from the start. The story is therefore not concluded but reconsidered.

Within the sacramental framework of the Catholic Church, marriage is not understood merely as a legal contract but as a covenant that participates symbolically in a larger narrative of fidelity. The Catechism of the Catholic Church describes marriage as raised to the dignity of a sacrament, a visible sign that communicates an invisible reality. The meaning of the union extends beyond the individuals involved. The marriage becomes part of a story already in progress.

Because the sacrament is understood narratively, annulment also functions narratively. The process gathers testimony, reconstructs circumstances, and evaluates whether both parties possessed the freedom, intention, and understanding necessary to enter the story the sacrament signifies. The Code of Canon Law emphasizes that consent establishes marriage, suggesting that the meaning of the union depends upon the integrity of the narrative commitment made at its origin.

The process begins to resemble historiography.

Witnesses are consulted. Context is examined. Questions of maturity, expectation, and intention are explored. The tribunal does not simply evaluate behavior but interprets meaning. The question becomes not only what happened, but what the events signified within the framework of sacramental understanding.

The past is revisited in order to determine whether the story being told at the time could sustain the symbolic weight it was asked to carry.

If the narrative coherence required for sacramental participation was not fully present, the Church may determine that the marriage, while socially real, was sacramentally incomplete. This conclusion does not erase the lived experience of the relationship. Rather, it reframes the story of the relationship so that present participation in the sacramental life of the community becomes possible.

The story changes so that belonging can continue.

In this way, annulment reflects the same narrative impulse visible in earlier Christian storytelling traditions. Just as the Gospel of Nicodemus imagines Christ entering the past in order to restore those excluded by historical circumstance, annulment represents an institutional effort to address discontinuity within lived experience. Where mythic narrative once extended the story backward to include those separated by time, canonical procedure now reinterprets personal history in order to sustain continuity within community.

Both reveal the human desire for stories that allow life to remain intelligible even after rupture.

From outside the sacramental tradition, the process may appear unusual. Yet when considered within the broader framework of narrative identity, the impulse becomes recognizable. Individuals regularly reinterpret earlier chapters of their lives in light of later understanding. Decisions made with limited perspective are reconsidered through the lens of subsequent experience. Memory itself participates in narrative reconstruction.

Annulment formalizes a practice already present in ordinary human life.

We revisit our beginnings in order to understand our present.

We tell the story again so that the future remains possible.

Why Humans Tell Stories of Return

Across these examples, a consistent pattern emerges. When confronted with rupture, religious traditions do not simply abandon the story. They expand it.

The speaking cross refuses to allow the crucifixion to function as narrative termination. The Harrowing of Hell extends belonging backward in time so that those excluded by chronology may still participate in the meaning of the story. Annulment revisits the beginning of a marriage so that present participation in communal life may be restored. In each case, disruption does not end the narrative. It requires reinterpretation.

These stories persist because they address a recurring feature of human experience: life rarely unfolds according to the expectations with which it begins. Relationships fracture. Beliefs change. Commitments prove more complex than originally understood. Time introduces developments that earlier versions of the self could not fully anticipate. Without some mechanism for reinterpretation, rupture threatens to become permanent identity.

Narrative allows continuity to survive change.

Jerome Bruner argued that individuals construct identity through the stories they tell about their lives. The self is not experienced merely as a sequence of events but as an unfolding account that links past, present, and anticipated future into a recognizable pattern. When events disrupt the expected pattern, the story must be retold in order to preserve coherence.

Religious traditions provide culturally developed forms of this narrative work. They preserve stories in which exile does not eliminate the possibility of return, failure does not eliminate the possibility of forgiveness, and endings do not eliminate the possibility of transformation. These stories do not remove suffering or eliminate loss. Instead, they create interpretive frameworks within which suffering and loss may still participate in meaningful structure.

Alasdair MacIntyre observed that individuals inherit roles within ongoing narratives that began before they entered them. Traditions provide continuity that allows personal stories to participate in communal meaning. Religious narratives function as extended conversations across generations regarding the nature of human flourishing, responsibility, and hope.

Within the framework of this project, religion appears less as a fixed set of metaphysical propositions and more as an evolving archive of stories that preserve the possibility of restoration. The persistence of these narratives suggests that the need they address has not disappeared. Even when belief becomes uncertain, the desire for continuity remains.

Stories of return continue to resonate because human beings continue to experience rupture.

The talking cross speaks because the story must continue.

The descent into the realm of the dead suggests that exclusion need not remain final.

Annulment reflects the institutional recognition that the meaning of a beginning may require reconsideration.

In each case, narrative functions as a form of repair.

The story grows so that life remains interpretable.

Religious traditions endure because they preserve the hope that rupture does not have the final word.

In Closing

The talking cross, the Harrowing of Hell, and the practice of annulment each illustrate a recurring feature of religious storytelling. When rupture threatens to interrupt continuity, the story does not simply end. It develops. Symbols become animated. the past is revisited. beginnings are reconsidered. Narrative expands so that meaning may continue.

These movements need not be interpreted as attempts to deny reality. Instead, they reveal the human desire to live within a world that remains interpretable even when circumstances change. Stories of return do not eliminate suffering, but they resist the conclusion that suffering renders life meaningless. They preserve the possibility that disruption may be integrated into a larger pattern that remains coherent.

Within the framework of this project, religion appears less as a static structure of propositions and more as an ongoing conversation about how human beings understand themselves in relation to time, responsibility, and community. The persistence of religious narrative suggests that the problems these stories address have not disappeared. Individuals continue to experience fracture between intention and outcome, between past commitments and present understanding, between inherited structures and lived experience.

Stories provide a means of negotiating these tensions.

The cross speaks because silence would imply that the story has ended.

The descent into the realm of the dead suggests that exclusion need not remain final.

Annulment reflects the recognition that beginnings may require reinterpretation in order for participation to continue.

Religion endures because the human need for narrative repair endures.

The story continues because we continue.


Desecration (Left Behind #9)