apocalyptic man ablaze: the hope fo burning man's effigy revealed in the risen holy fool

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    Apocalyptic Man Ablaze: The Hope of Burning Mans Effigy Revealed

    in the Risen Holy Fool

    By John W. Morehead

    His head and hair were white like wool, as white as snow, and his eyes were like

    blazing fire. His feet were like bronze glowing in a furnace. His face was like the sunshining in all its brilliance

    St. Johns vision of the Son of Man in Revelation 1:14-15a

    That which we seek when wide-eyed we came

    As virgins entranced towards this huge burning flameStill flickers with hope! Our embers ignite

    Rekindled by joy each year we unite.1

    Poem by Burner Constance Hull

    Abstract: The alternative heterotopic community of Burning Man festival demonstrates

    elements of human experience that can be interpreted as signals of transcendence. In a post-

    modern context, holy foolishness provides an appropriate motif for engaging this community

    regarding these expressions of the sacred. Jesus as Holy Fool embodies divine wisdom in the

    1http://www.burningman.com/blackrockcity_yearround/tales/constance2.html

    http://www.burningman.com/blackrockcity_yearround/tales/constance2.htmlhttp://www.burningman.com/blackrockcity_yearround/tales/constance2.htmlhttp://www.burningman.com/blackrockcity_yearround/tales/constance2.htmlhttp://www.burningman.com/blackrockcity_yearround/tales/constance2.html
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    context of festivity, overcomes the abusive powers of authority, and unveils himself as the

    Apocalyptic Man Ablaze offering us the gift wholeness and reconnection with the divine.

    Introduction

    I first heard of the Burning Man festival outside Reno in the Black Rock Desert of

    Nevada through newspaper articles and the Internet2 about five years ago. I was

    immediately intrigued, not only by the size of the crowds that attend each year (near

    40,000 for the 2006 event), but also by the reputation the festival has received in press

    accounts. It is not uncommon to find nudity, sexual experimentation, and drug use as

    prevalent themes in treatments of Burning Man in the popular media. Unfortunately,

    many evangelicals are either unaware of the festivals existence, or they too share in the

    popular medias fixation on some of the festivals more salacious elements, which

    represents only a fraction of what takes place and which does not represent the essence of

    the significance of the meanings that can be taken away from an analysis of this event.

    After studying this festival for several years on popular and academic levels, I had

    the opportunity to attend and participate for the first time in 2006. I found the festival as

    challenging as it was intriguing, even after my preparations through previous study, and

    my other missions research and activities among religious and spiritual subcultures that

    tend to unsettle many conservative evangelicals. From blinding dust storms and extremes

    in weather between day and night, to the social inversion and experimentation that

    playfully mocked aspects of American culture, to the prevalent nudity, to the amazing art

    expressed in numerous forms, to the incredibly festive nightlife, Burning Man challenges

    the senses as well as traditional sensibilities.

    2 The official Burning Man website can be found at www.burningman.com.

    2

    http://www.burningman.com/http://www.burningman.com/
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    Space limitations and the missional apologetic focus of this paper preclude

    lengthy discussion of the meaning of the festival, but this background is important to an

    understanding of the context in which the missional apologetic is placed. This paper will

    begin with a summary of the festival in order to understand this context, and will then

    discuss the cultural context of engagement. I will then begin to sketch the contours of a

    form of theological and apologetic engagement that draws upon sociology and

    anthropology. I will look at the significance of festival and festivity, and finally, I will

    provide an apologetic approach that draws upon the motif of the holy fool in post-

    modernity, and how the story of Jesus as holy fool who brings divine wisdom might be

    communicated through this motif.

    Burning Man Interpretive Summary

    How should Burning Man be interpreted? What is the meaning or meanings of the

    Burning Man festival? As mentioned above this is an important starting point in a

    discussion of missional apologetic engagement. The festival has been described by its

    creators as an annual art festival and temporary community based on radical self

    expression and self-reliance, but even with this self-definition its founders and

    participants desire to keep the event free from the prison of interpretation, explanation,

    and the insidious net of Meaning (Davis 2005, 15). Even so, it is possible to apply

    various academic disciplines in order to arrive at an interdisciplinary perspective on the

    event from an outsiders (etic) perspective, but one that does so with an eye toward a

    sympathetic insiders (emic) concerns.

    A review of sociological and anthropological concepts such as Hakim Beys

    Temporary Autonomous Zone (Bey 1991), and Victor Turners notions of liminality and

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    liminoid experiences resulting in strong social bonds of communitas (Turner 1969), leads

    to an interpretation of Burning Man as a place where ritual and festivity create a

    community which functions as a liminoid counterworld of permission, [and where]

    participants experimentwith desired sources of authenticity as a means of (re)creating

    their identities (St. John 2000, 177; emphasis in original). This festive counter-world

    experiment serves as an alternative cultural heterotopic community, that is, an alternate

    social gathering invested with multiple meanings (Ibid., 229; emphasis in original).

    Within this heterotopic community participants create and discover meaning and purpose

    through ritual and art and thus achieve new understandings of self and community.

    3

    Space limitations preclude sufficient unpacking of the summary above, but the

    interested reader may refer to the longer discussion available in my previous paper on this

    topic.4

    Cultural Context of Engagement

    With a summary of the meaning of Burning Man in mind we turn our attention to

    how this alternative community might best be missionally and apologetically engaged by

    evangelicals. At the outset we must acknowledge that this community poses several

    challenges to the evangelical subculture, and here two primary and related areas must be

    taken into account.

    First, in many ways Burning Man represents a counter-cultural reaction against

    facets of modernity and Christendom. In my application above of St. Johns observations

    3Explorations of other academic interpretations of Burning Man may be found in Lee Gilmore, Theater in

    a Crowded Fire: Spirituality, Ritualization, and Cultural Performativity at the Burning Man Festival. Ph.D.

    diss., Graduate Theological Union, 2005; and Lee Gilmore & Mark Van Proyen (eds),AfterBurn:

    Reflections on Burning Man (Albuquerque, NM: The University of New Mexico Press, 2005).4 John W. Morehead, Burn, Baby, Burn, Christendom Inferno: Burning Man and the Festive Immolation

    of Christendom Culture and Modernity, unpublished paper for the Summer Missions Project at Salt Lake

    Theological Seminary available electronically athttp://www.lop45.org/forum/forum/forum_posts.asp?

    TID=32&PN=1.

    4

    http://www.lop45.org/forum/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=32&PN=1http://www.lop45.org/forum/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=32&PN=1http://www.lop45.org/forum/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=32&PN=1http://www.lop45.org/forum/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=32&PN=1http://www.lop45.org/forum/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=32&PN=1http://www.lop45.org/forum/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=32&PN=1
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    related to the Australian ConFest community, Burning Man represents a counter-world

    and counter-community that consciously creates an alternative in opposition to aspects of

    modernity, including Christendom, which have been tried and found wanting.

    (Regardless of whether Christianity has been properly understood this is the common

    perception of many at Burning Man and our engagement with this alternative culture

    must begin with the perceptions of our audience rather than the perceptions Christians

    may hold by contrast.) Thus, any missional engagement with Burning Man must take this

    counter-modernity and counter-Christendom ethos into account if it is to have any hopes

    of communicating within this context.

    5

    Second and related to the context of counter-modernity and counter-Christendom,

    Burning Man expresses itself within a cultural context that exhibits a decidedly post-

    modern and post-Christendom approach to spirituality. Christianity continues to play a

    significant role in American culture, and may have been the dominant religion in

    America and the Western world in the past, but in recent decades there has been a

    declining influence of religion particularly Christianity (Heelas & Woodhead 2005,

    1). This has come about through a secularization of the West which in turn has led to a

    spiritual re-enchantment6 process. This re-enchantment involves the preference for

    spirituality rather than religion, and is characterized by an emphasis upon an

    individualized, subjective, and eclectic spiritual quest. In this environment of the post-

    modern spirituality seeker, Christianity is perceived negatively as a dogmatic institution

    rather than a vibrant spirituality whose adherents have often failed to live up to the

    5 John Drane discusses many of the implications of cultural change for the faith of Christians within post-

    modernity inFaith in a Changing Culture: Creating Churches for the Next Century (London: Marshall

    Pickering, 1997); and Cultural Change and Biblical Faith (Cumbria, UK: Paternoster Press, 2000).6 Christopher Partridge explores the ramifications of the re-enchantment thesis in The Re-Enchantment of

    the West, vol. 1 (London & New York: T & T Clark International, 2004).

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    sociology, and resulted in a search for signals of transcendence in order to

    transcendentalize secularity (Ibid., 13). By these signals of transcendence Berger

    meant phenomena that are to be found within the domain of our natural reality but that

    appear to point beyond that reality (Berger 1969, 53). He felt that these sociological

    experiences are best understood as pointers to Gods presence and existence. Berger

    developed this thinking in light of the skeptical response to Christianity that developed

    historically and which reached a crescendo in the turbulent times of the counter-culture of

    the 1960s in which he wroteRumor. Given that Burning Man is in many ways a

    continuation and fruit of this counter-culture, having originated out of the influential

    Bohemian subculture of the San Francisco Bay Area, Bergers theological insights seem

    especially applicable in the development of a missional apologetic. Let us consider

    several of Bergers signals of transcendence that are especially relevant to Burning Man.

    To the casual evangelical observer Burning Man participants might seem as if

    they are interested in anything but spirituality, or at least few spiritual themes in which

    evangelicals might find common ground. But this is not the case, as we will see from

    specific examples of Bergers thesis. One of the examples Berger offers is the argument

    from play (Ibid., 57; emphasis in original). As he discusses this he notes that,

    One aspect of play..is the fact that play sets up a separate universe of discourse,

    with its own rules, which suspends, for the duration, the rules and generalassumptions of the serious world. One of the most important assumptions thus

    suspended is the time structure of ordinary social life.In playing, one steps out

    of one time into another (Ibid., 58).

    Bergers mention of time, and the important distinction between play time and

    ordinary time, dovetails with the thinking of Mircea Eliade who distinguished between

    profane and sacred time in the celebration of religious festivals (Eliade 1959; cf. Pieper

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    1999, 52-53 and Falassi 1967). According to Eliade, religious rituals conducted during

    festivals recapture a sense of sacred time and nullify profane time. While Burning Man

    should not be construed as a religious festival per se, its festive experimentation and play

    with various religious themes and symbolism leads to its being legitimately understood as

    a spiritual festival in many ways. Thus Berger and Eliades observations regarding play

    and its relationship to time have relevance. With the notion of sacred time related to ritual

    and play in mind, play at Burning Man represents far more than the activities of adults

    pursuing meaningless abandon in an escape from and rebellion against the profane world.

    Rather, play at Burning Man can be understood as a context wherein participants enter

    into a sacred time of expression that appears as if one were stepping not only from one

    chronology into another, but from time into eternity (Berger 1969, 58). Thus, play at

    Burning Man represents an important signal of transcendence.

    A second example provided by Berger is the argument from hope (Ibid., 60)

    presented in the specific context of hope in the face of death. But this is not the only

    context in which hope is expressed by human beings, and Berger also links this to

    human creation, justice or compassion with an example he calls humanitas the artist

    who, against all odds and even in failing health, strives to finish his creative act (Ibid.,

    62).

    The argument from hope and Bergers example of artistry are applicable to

    Burning Man as exemplified through the theme for 2006 of Hope & Fear: The Future.

    This theme was explored in light of Burning Mans perceptions of the various challenges

    to the human race in the twenty-first century, and was connected to and expressed

    through art, as exemplified in the design for the structure supporting the effigy of the

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    Man, the figure which serves as the symbolic center for the festival.7 If we apply Bergers

    argument from hope to Burning Man then the art, ritual, festivity, and other various

    activities expressed in expectation of hope by its participants represent expressions that

    can only be justified in light of a transcendent realm that provides ultimate vindication for

    hope in the face of post-modern nihilism. Thus, the argument from hope provides another

    indicator of Burning Mans signals of transcendence.

    A third example provided by Berger is the argument from humor (Ibid., 69). In

    this argument,

    [t]he comic reflects the imprisonment of the human spirit in the world.Bylaughing at the imprisonment of the human spirit, humor implies that this

    imprisonment is not final but will be overcome, and by this implication providesyet another signal of transcendence (Ibid., 70).

    Humor represents a significant facet of the playfulness expressed at Burning Man, and

    much of this takes place as participants draw upon the symbolism and ideas of

    mainstream society and then mocks the serious business of this world and the mighty

    who carry it out (Ibid.) in a process of social inversion. Interestingly, the use of humor

    as a means of social inversion in Burning Man parallels the mocking of civic and

    ecclesiastical powers historically in festivals such as the medieval Feast of Fools.

    Another area might be noted as a signal of transcendence, although it is not

    found in Bergers discussion of this topic, and that is the argument from nudity. R. C.

    Sproul includes a chapter discussion on nudity in one of his books in which he discusses

    it within the context of a psychology of atheism (Sproul 1978, 107-136). He quotes

    Sartre with reference to a sense of shame-consciousness, which is often connected to

    nudity, particularly shame of the self before the Other (Ibid. 109).He also mentions the

    7 Hope & Fear: The Future,Burning Man Journal(Summer 2006): 4.

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    work of Kierkegaard with his discussion of the human desire for self-concealment. With

    nudity, especially in the West, human beings seem to have the conflicting desire to both

    experience nudity in the other, and sometimes the self, but also the corresponding to

    conceal ones own nudity, and sometimes to show it to others as well. Sproul mentions

    that with this we find irony, paradox and ambivalence in Western mans idea of

    nakedness/clothedness and concealment/openness (Ibid., 118).

    As mentioned in the introduction to this essay, nudity is a prominent element of

    Burning Man, and one most often touched on in the media and evangelical treatments of

    the festival. At Burning Man we see the same paradox exhibited in that the majority of

    participants are clothed, but there is also a significant expression of nudity. But while

    Christians might typically consider nudity as a signal of debauchery rather than a signal

    of transcendence, in general the prevalence of nudity at Burning Man does not fit this

    understanding. In my experience at the festival very little of the nudity seemed to be

    about sexuality per se, but rather it appeared to be explored in the sense of freedom from

    routine cultural restrictions, identity (re)creation, and bodily experimentation, and

    perhaps even attempts at reconnecting with the divine. St. John came to similar

    conclusions with reference to nudity and carnality at the ConFest alternative community

    festival in Australia (St. John 2000). If these observations are accurate, then the nudity at

    Burning Man represents an indication that festival participants desire new senses of

    identity and understandings of the body that reconnect them with the sacred. Space

    limitations preclude any detailed discussion on this latter point but an apologia could be

    constructed from the psychology of religion and grounded in an argument that ceremonial

    and festive nudity can represent a primordial human urge to return to Eden and to be

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    transparent before God. It would be an application of Sproul's apologetic discussion on

    nudity, shame and transparency. In light of these considerations nudity serves as yet

    another signal of transcendence.

    Holy Fools in Post-Modernity

    Having looked at various signals of transcendence within Burning Man that

    demonstrate this communitys interest in significant issues of daily life that point toward

    God, and which can serve as points of missiological and apologetic points of contact, we

    now turn our attention to discussion of the second component of engagement, the form of

    communication.

    Communication must be adapted and contextualized appropriately for differing

    audiences, and this is the case for good missional engagement8 as well as for good

    communication in other contexts. Missional apologetic methods that were effective in the

    context of modernity will not be effective in post-modernity. Related to this

    consideration, Peter Phan discusses a means of communicating wisdom within post-

    modernity and notes two forms of communication that he sees as inappropriate within

    this cultural context. The first is mythos or the form of dramatic narratives explaining

    the origin and operation of the universe and place of human beings within it (2001, 730).

    This was appropriate for previous cultures in history but is now depreciated in the West.

    The second form of communication he discusses is logos or a means of communication

    which emphasizes the rational and the printed text. Phan sees both of these methods as

    inappropriate in post-modernity as the royal road to wisdom by means ofmythos and

    logos is barred, at least for those who have experienced the tragic consequences of the

    8 David J. Hesselgrave & Edward Rommen, Contextualization: Meanings, Methods and Models (Pasadena,

    CA: William Carey Library, 2000).

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    modern myth of progress (Ibid. 731). In their place, Phan suggests mrosophia, or what

    has been called holy folly or crazy wisdom or foolish wisdom as an alternative route

    to rekindle the love of wisdom in the hearts of women and men and (Ibid.).

    The concept of foolish wisdom has a long historical pedigree in the Judeo-

    Christian tradition. Stewart traces this back to the Hebrew prophets such as Jeremiah,

    Hosea, Isaiah, and Ezekiel (1999, 51-53). She also makes a solid case that connects Jesus

    and the New Testament to this tradition of divine folly, as does Phan, who notes that

    [t]he Cross of Christ as the paradigm of Gods folly foolish wisdom and wise

    foolishness is elaborated at length by Paul in his First Letter to the Corinthians (2001,

    739).

    Welborn also addresses Pauls discussion in 1 Corinthians and explores it in depth

    (2002). While Paul has traditionally been understood to reference the foolishness of the

    cross in 1 Corinthians 1:18 in light of its alleged absurdity to the people of the ancient

    world, Welborn provides a convincing case that Paul drew upon foolishness from the

    imagery of Greco-Roman theater and the character of the mime or clown in order to

    communicate his message. If Welborns analysis is correct, Paul portrays himself as a

    well known figure in the mime: the befuddled orator (Ibid., 430). This rhetorical strategy

    was practiced by a number of intellectuals in the early Empire, due to the attractiveness

    of the fool in his freedom in the utterance of a dangerous truth (Ibid. 433-434).

    Just as Paul was able to draw upon the fool as a strategic rhetorical means of

    communicating a great paradox to his audience concerning Gods wisdom, Christians can

    seize upon the notion of holy foolishness as a means of communicating divine wisdom to

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    post-moderns. Mrosophia may serve as a sound pedagogical device to lead others to

    wisdom (Phan 2001, 742) within Burning Man.

    Jesus as Holy Fool

    With the pedagogical value of holy foolishness in mind, we return to

    consideration of Jesus within this holy fool tradition. Stewart notes that Christians shy

    away from such considerations perhaps because of possible fears of irreverence.

    However, she argues that we miss an important aspect of Christology if we neglect it.

    Stewart does not shy away from this topic, and her discussion of it at some length

    provides us with interesting observations.

    Stewarts touches on a number of areas such as Jesus embarrassing rejection in

    Nazareth as nothing more than the carpenters son (Matt. 13:54-56), his frequent

    connection to bad company, and his extension of table fellowship to social outcasts that

    served as a parody of the eschatological banquet, a mockery of traditional expectations

    (Stewart 1999, 77). She also mentions Jesus flouting of conventional wisdom related to

    the interpretation of the Law (Matt. 5:17-18), and the apparent foolishness of his other

    teachings wherein [l]ove of enemies and returning good for evil are Christian mandates,

    and neighbors must be redefined as extending to everyone, without exception (Ibid.

    99). Stewart discusses the price Jesus paid for this folly in terms of name calling

    (madman, glutton, drunkard), his familys estimation that he was mad (Mark 1:14-15), to

    the claims of his opponents that he was a blasphemer and sinner, and the final price paid

    in his passion where even in his final hours he was mocked by religious authorities as

    well as the common people.

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    These examples should serve as reminders for evangelicals of the holy foolishness

    embraced by Jesus, and yet few Christians explore this as a significant element of

    Christology. Stewart provocatively suggests reasons why:

    Following Jesus the Holy Fool is a radically different proposition, for example,

    than following my buddy Jesus and practicing a Christianity which can only be

    described as self-indulgent. Precisely because contemporary Western Christianityhas become disconnected from the Holy Foolishness of Christ and from the

    Dionysian elements of religion, the person of Jesus has been tamed into a

    marketable construct far removed from the gospel of Jesus or from the living

    Christ who can still be encountered in Third World nations.[Most Westerners]cower in dread before the figure of a Dionysian Christ because he is too

    passionate, too alive, and too challenging to be attractive (Ibid., 176-177).

    The presentation of the type of Jesus found commonly in evangelical churches

    simply will not speak meaningfully to Burning Man participants. Only the robust Jesus as

    Holy Fool, Jesus the Jester or Jesus the Trickster is appropriate as a Jesus vested as a

    personification of festivity and fantasy in an age which has almost lost both (Ibid.,

    179). Mike Frost also speaks of Jesus as Jester and states that, As the fool, Jesus was

    able to transform the mindset of his culture, and thousands of cultures since, by using his

    foolishness like a stalking horse. The prophet sneaks up on us (1994, electronic copy of

    forthcoming revised edition). The foolishness of Jesus that communicates divine wisdom

    can also be drawn upon to sneak up on Burning Man participants.

    Theology of Festivity

    The final component to be considered in a missional apologetic before we

    combine the elements and put forward the specific means of engagement is that of

    festivity. Festival is the primary context of expression for the Burning Man community.

    This presents serious challenges to Protestantism which lost its connection to festival.

    While Roman Catholic and secular scholars have devoted serious attention to festivity,

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    this is not the case with Protestants. Festivity is not taken seriously either as a cultural

    phenomenon or as a topic for scholarly exploration by most Protestants, and yet Catholic

    scholars have argued that festivals belong by rights among the greatest topics of

    philosophical discussion (Pieper 1999, back cover).

    One of the Protestants who has addressed festivals is Harvey Cox who argued that

    human beings are essentially festive and ritual creatures (1969, 8; cf. Browning 1980).

    As homo festivus and homo fantasia, human beings express festivity and fantasy through

    festival as a form of theatre of the body. Cox argues that with the march of

    secularization and the continued rejection of festivity Christianity has often adjusted too

    quickly to the categories of modernity (Ibid. 15), and with this, important facets of what

    it means to be human are neglected. As a result, Cox believes that there is a real need for

    Christianity in the West to develop a theology of festivity.

    In light of this festivity vacuum there is much to be learned theologically from

    festivals as Max Harris suggests:

    The popular elements in patronal saints day festivals, like Carnival, have oftenbeen demonized as pagan or heretical...Could it be that popular religious festivals

    offer a source of theological wisdom, otherwise unarticulated and therefore

    unnoticed by formal theology, that is worthy of a place alongside sacred text,reason, and ecclesiastical tradition? Such a perspective would partly balance the

    standard sources of theology, which privilege clerical exegesis, educated reason,

    and authoritative legitimation of tradition (2003, 28).

    I share Harris assessment about the theological value of festivals in general, and the

    same could be said of Burning Man in particular. In light of the intriguing idea that Harris

    puts forward, and given the nature of Burning Man as a festive counter-community,

    evangelicals must consider festivity as a major theological and missiological topic for

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    future exploration. It also represents a significant facet of the specific missional

    apologetic at Burning Man and to this we now turn.

    Apocalyptic Man Ablaze

    Our missional apologetic approach draws upon the apocalyptic image of the Son

    of Man described by John in Revelation 1:14-18:

    His head and hair were white like wool, as white as snow, and his eyes were like

    blazing fire. His feet were like bronze glowing in a furnace, and his voice was like

    the sound of rushing waters. In his right hand he held seven stars, and out of hismouth came a sharp double-edged sword. His face was like the sun shining in all

    its brilliance.

    In his vision John poetically describes Christ in fiery imagery, with blazing eyes, glowing

    feet, and a face shining like the sun. This imagery of the blazing apocalyptic

    (unveiling) Son of Man revealing himself to John is contrasted with the literal effigy of

    the Man set ablaze at the conclusions of the Burning Man festival. The burn represents

    the highlight of the festival and it is rich with symbolism. While each individual is left to

    themselves to apply their own meaning to the symbolism of the destruction of the Man,

    many Burners attach great significance to him as a figure of hope that dies each year only

    to rise and be reborn again in the following year. Our missional apologetic will seek to

    communicate Jesus as the fulfillment of the hopes of the Burning Man community as

    exemplified in their activities as signals of transcendence, and invested in the burn of the

    Man, and in this way Jesus is understood as the Apocalyptic Man Ablaze, the true

    Burning Man unveiled to John the Apostle.

    This interpretation of the burning of the Man is shared in the context of festival

    with its emphasis on social inversion. This can be connected directly to the Christian

    narrative which has had a strong influence on festivals historically such as the Feast of

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    Fools and Carnival. Harris discusses this connection specifically in connection with the

    former:

    The Feast of Fools, with its explicit justification in the Magnificat, noisily

    proclaimed the Christian basis for festive roles of reversal.Christs utterancesabout children and the Kingdom of Heaven, Isaiahs prophecy that a little child

    shall lead them (Isaiah 11:6), and the theme of inversion and the world turned

    upside-down found in texts like the Magnificat.. (Harris 2003, 141).

    Festivals thus have a historic connection to Christianity, one of the most obvious

    being that of Carnival with its connection to Lent. Carnival is a Roman Catholic

    celebration with the carnival season being a holiday period that is celebrated during the

    two weeks before the traditional Christian fasting of Lent. Lent is a time of preparation

    for Holy Week, and its forty days of observance are symbolic of forty day periods of

    religious significance found in the Judeo-Christian narrative, most especially Jesus

    retreat into the wilderness for a time of fasting and temptation.

    Aspects of the celebration of Carnival during the Renaissance are particularly

    important to our apologetic as we seek to make a connection to Burning Man. During this

    period the carnival involved a procession or parade which then culminated in the spiritual

    re-enactment of Lent. This procession involved a number of characters who enacted a

    drama. These characters came to be represented in tarot cards9 such as the Italian

    Visconti-Sforza tarot or tarocchi dating to the middle of the fifteenth century which

    incorporated the artistic imagery of Bonifacio Bembo (Moakley 1966, 19). Two of the

    more interesting symbolic figures of the procession and the tarot are the Fool and the

    Carnival King. Moakley says that, The Fool is to be dressed very gaily in red and yellow

    adorned with bells, and is to be shown riding on an ass. Here is the first evidence of the

    9 Although the tarot later came to be associated with divination it originally began as a game variously

    known as Triumphs. Only later was the tarot used for various esoteric purposes. See John Drane, Ross

    Clifford & Philip Johnson,Beyond Prediction: The Tarot and Your Spirituality (Oxford: Lion Publishing,

    2001).

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    tendency of the Fool to usurp the place of the first.. (Ibid., 49). In addition to the Fool

    we must consider the Carnival King. In the Carnival procession he is the principal

    victim of the triumph of Death, and he rises hopefully from the grave in the triumph of

    Eternity (Ibid. 55). Although the medieval Carnival prohibited an actual death the

    execution of the Carnival King was an execution in effigy which involved the

    cremation of King Carnival (Ibid., 58).

    The similarities of the Fool and the Carnival King to the Christian narrative

    should be evident to evangelicals, with the Fool riding on an ass (evoking images of

    Jesus Triumphal Entry into Jerusalem), and the execution of the Carnival King (evoking

    Jesus death). In addition, the effigy cremation of the Carnival King finds a parallel in the

    effigy of the Man set ablaze at the conclusion of Burning Man. Beyond these interesting

    points of contact, we can draw upon the medieval carnival and its tarot imagery in the

    construction of a contextualized apologetic.

    The tarot cards involve symbolic depictions of life and its meaning in many

    ancient cultural contexts (Drane, Clifford & Johnson 2001, 26). The imagery of the

    cards tap into universal archetypes and a symbolic world, and as such they can be used to

    communicate a universal human story (Ibid. 25). This symbolic imagery not only

    touches on the mundane of life but also portrays the spiritual journey. This leads to the

    premiere figure in the deck, the character of The Fool. The Fool is the Jester, a comedic

    and carnival figure. Yet the Fool also embraces the wisdom of God through his

    foolishness. Consider the symbolism of the Fool in the Rider Waite tarot deck:

    This is the most powerful card in the entire deck. The Fool strolls towards a

    precipice unconcerned. The world is alive with his presence and he carries the

    most powerful spiritual symbols of all.

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    The bright sunshine accompanies the fool because his presence dispels all

    darkness. He walks among the mountain tops the abode of the creator. Across

    his shoulder he carries the shepherds staff, which is also found in the Hermitcard, and at the end of the staff is a bag containing a free gift for those who meet

    him. In his other hand the Fool holds the white rose, which only appears on the

    Death card. At his feet there is a white dog following him, different from the evildog on the Moon card and is a symbol for those who follow their master.

    The Fool, who is young in years, is the true spiritual guide. He holds theshepherds crook, because it is he who brings spiritual direction. The good

    shepherd knows his sheep by name and they know his voice. Following the

    shepherd brings eternal life as he holds the white rose taken from the Grim

    Reaper. The shepherd as our guide is a free gift. (Ibid., 93)

    Through the use of tarot imagery and symbolism we can connect the dots and

    bring together the various elements we have discussed previously including the history

    and symbolism of Carnival and Lent, the biblical story, and Burning Man into a narrative

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    form of a missional apologetic relevant to Burning Man. This approach must be

    communicated by evangelicals within the context of identification with and empathy for

    Burning Man participants, and include the facets of community, participation, and

    missional incarnation in this subculture.

    Life is a journey, and we come to the desert of Burning Man as a part of that

    journey. We engage in various activities such as play, humor, and hope that express our

    deepest desires for a sense of Spirit in and beyond our lives and the creation. The context

    of Burning Man is creativity and festivity, yet the desert environment also involves

    isolation and a time of personal testing. This contrast of festivity and self-denial that we

    experience at Burning Man is common to other peoples, cultures, and times, and such as

    the medieval celebration of Carnival and Lent. Just as Carnival would often end in the

    cremated effigy of the executed Carnival King, the Burning Man festival culminates in

    the symbolic burning of the Man. But something is different in the Man in that in him we

    as Burning Man participants invest our hopes and dreams in anticipation of his rising

    again the next year. By way of personal interpretation and application of this carnival and

    festival symbolism past and present, the celebration of the carnival of life introduces us to

    themes of enjoyment and festivity but also sets the stage for our individual spiritual

    journeys and times of testing.

    With this understanding we turn to the spiritual tool of the tarot as a means of

    understanding ourselves and our journey in this festive place. In the tarot the carnival of

    life is symbolically represented particularly in the character of the Fool. He moves

    through life engaging in festivity and is ignored by the world that dismisses him as a

    worthless jester. However, through his jesting the Fool engages in holy foolishness and

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    through his divine wisdom subverts the wisdom of the powers which damage our

    connections to nature, to self, to community, and to the divine. The work of the Fool

    climaxes in his death. Seemingly defeated, he mocks the powers by rising from the dead,

    forever alive. He is symbolically present not only in the tarot, but also in the effigy of the

    Burning Man. Thus, the Fool unveils himself (apocalyptic) as the true Burning Man,

    rising and shining with fiery brilliance.

    Conclusion

    The Apocalyptic Man Ablaze can be shared in a variety of ways, both through

    interactive dialogue involving the tarot cards, as well as through performance art that

    involves actors, dancers, and jesters acting out the characters and symbolism of the tarot

    and its connection to carnival, festival, and Burning Man. Through these means of

    missional apologetic engagement we can extend an invitation to Burning Man

    participants:

    The Fool has always been with us, calling us from death to new life, empowering

    us on the roller coaster of life. He is our universal hero, the wind beneath our

    wings. He invites us to be his dancing partner. As we begin to move our feet inthe divine dance, the choreography progressively leads us to abandon all the

    negative energies properly depicted in the Tarot cards. As we are swept into the

    Fools positive embrace, we intuitively know who we want to explore life with.The Tarot beyond prediction is a call to broaden our horizons beyond our

    consciousness and to reconnect our souls with the divine source of all life. Lets

    dance. (Ibid., 133)

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    BIBLIOGRAPHY/WORKS CITED

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    Browning, Robert L. 1980. Festivity From a Protestant Perspective,ReligiousEducation 75/3 (May-June): 273-281.

    Chad, Martin. 1999. Carnival: A Theology of Laughter and a Ritual for Social Change,Worship 73/1 (January): 45-53.

    Cox, Harvey. 1969. The Feast of Fools: A Theological Essay on Feasting and Festivity.

    New York: Harper & Row Publishers.

    Drane, John, Ross Clifford & Philip Johnson. 2001.Beyond Prediction: The Tarot andYour Spirituality. Oxford: Lion Publishing.

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    Moakley, Gertrude. 1966. The Tarot Cards Painted by Bonifacio Bembo For theVisconti-Sforza Family. New York: New York Public Library.

    Phan, Peter C. 2001. The Wisdom of Holy Fools in Postmodernity, Theological Studies

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    Pieper, Josef. 1999. In Tune with the World: A Theory of Festivity. South Bend: St.

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    St. John, Graham. 2000. Alternative Cultural Heterotopia: ConFest as Australias

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    Santino, Jack (ed). 1994.Halloween and Festivals of Death and Life. Knoxville:

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    Sproul, R. C. 1978.If There Is a God, Why Are There Atheists? Minneapolis, MN:Bethany Fellowship.

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    Stewart, Elizabeth-Anne. 1999.Jesus the Holy Fool. Franklin, Wisconsin: Sheed &Ward.

    Tongeren, Louis Van, Paulus G. J. Post, G.A. Rouwhorst & A. Sheer (eds). 2001.Christian Feast and Festival: The Dynamics of Western Liturgy and Culture. Leuven:

    Peeters.

    Turner, Victor. 1969. The Ritual Process: Structure and Anti-Structure. Chicago, IL: Aldine.

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    . (ed). 1982. Celebration: Studies in Festivity and Ritual. Washington, D.C.:Smithsonian Institution Press.

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    Welborn, Laurence L. 2002. Pauls Appropriation of the Role of the Fool in 1

    Corinthians 1-4,Biblical Interpretation 10/4: 420-435.

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    Photo credits:

    Burning Man image on page 1, reproduced by permission. Copyright 2006 by Rick Egan,http://www.moonski.net/burningman/, and Burning Man LLC.

    The Fool Illustration on page 19 from the Rider-Waite Tarot Deck, known also as theRider Tarot and the Waite Tarot, reproduced by permission of U.S. Games Systems, Inc.,

    Stamford, CT 06902 USA. Copyright 1971 by U.S. Games Systems, Inc. Further

    reproduction prohibited. The Rider-Waite Tarot Deck is a registered trademark of U.S.Games Systems, Inc.

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    http://www.moonski.net/burningman/http://www.moonski.net/burningman/http://www.moonski.net/burningman/
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    Revisions:

    Feedback from Ken for revisions.

    On page 12 he suggests I need to develop the discussion of Pauls rhetorical strategy of

    the holy fool more fully, at least in footnotes.

    On page 14 with the mention of the Jesus in evangelical churches not speaking

    meaningfully to Burning Man as contrasted with Jesus the Jester, need to strengthen andexpand.

    On page 17 with distinction between Carnival and Lent, Ken suggests this is academic

    view. Modify this discussion in light of Chad Martins article.

    Philips suggestion: connect the dots on Pauls discussion of Jesus as embodiment of

    wisdom, and connect this to postmodern concerns for such a concept.