Janie Cheaney talks about war in the context of Andrew Peterson’s fourth book in The Wingfeather Saga. Do Christian novelists simplify and glorify it? “While most wars are wasteful and pointless, some are not. And ugly and terrifying as it is, battle seems to have an almost primeval appeal, especially to men. It’s as if they are called to find out what’s in them: savagery or heroism, unspeakable cruelty or self-sacrifice, the best or the worst.”
It’s a strong desire to live for something large. Perhaps that’s how we currently express the eternity God has set in our hearts “yet so that man will not find out the work which God has done from the beginning even to the end” (Ecclesiastes 3:11). That yearning for glory easily yields to the lust of our pride, making our desire to live for something big subservient to a desire to live a self-directed life, and in doing so we end up fighting over selfish things or for unwise causes. Lars’ latest novel, Death’s Doors, deals with this in that there’s a real battle over life and death raging around the characters, but their perspectives are too self-centered to see it for a while.
First off, the Wingfeather Saga is exceptional. As Tolkien notes, great stories are great no matter your age.
As far as war… I think that maybe before the Fall, men were made for battles, or struggles of some other sort, and the greatness we sometimes display in war is an echo of that first design, and the horrible things we do in war are the twisted remnants of what should have been.