The Last Testament: A Memoir (47 page)

Read The Last Testament: A Memoir Online

Authors: God,David Javerbaum

Tags: #General, #Humor, #Literary Criticism, #Religion, #American, #Topic

BOOK: The Last Testament: A Memoir
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62
It’s just . . . that . . . easy!
[The next five theses introduce a subplot about a lovable but mischievous puppy who diggeth up the neighbor’s prize gardenias; it nearly jumpeth the shark.]
68
Unlike those other guys, we don’t come with a built-in hierarchy; so since no one starts out “holier than thou,” everyone has the chance to
become
that way.
69
That’s why when it comes to confessing, we don’t turn to the so-called “experts” with their magical booths; instead, we rely on our own congregation’s built-in sense of scorn.
70
And we express that scorn using the most advanced system of social ostracism ever devised: A finely calibrated spectrum of disdain containing no less than 143 distinct shame-shades, from furtive looks and hushed whispers all the way to burning at the stake!
[There followeth four well-placed insert ads for local stake manufacturers.]
79
Still not convinced? Listen to these testimonials I’ve miraculously culled from decades and centuries into the future!
80
“I used to be an ordinary Catholic in Zurich. Then I joined your movement. Now I play a crucial role in shaping Swiss theology—the most boring aspect of the boringest nation on earth. Thanks, Protestantationalism®!”
—Ullrich Zwingli, Zurich, Switzerland
81
“I was so insufferably pompous I needed an entire ocean’s worth of space between myself and the continent I was holier than. Thanks to Protestantationalism®, I got it, and today I’m running my own witch trials!”—Cotton Mather, Plymouth, Massachusetts
82
“Zagnutab utta butta zhoot, yorma mitder pfffffffellen zordyx! Klee! Klee klee klee! Kleeeeeee!
There! Be gone, lymphoma!”—Tom Brown, Tom Brown Ministries
[There followeth a long public-service thesis on behalf of the Hanseatic League: “The Hanseatic League: We’ve Got a ‘Guild-y’ Conscience!”]
84
My friends, I know that some of you still have doubts about all this; that you may find it hard to even envision a world where Christianity has undergone such a radical transformation.
85
But I, Martin Luther, have a dream.
86
I have a dream that one day there will be a sect of Christianity specifically associated with oats.
87
I have a dream that one day priests will no longer be forced to live in a state of unnatural celibacy, but will be free to marry and have celibacy slowly descend upon them in the natural way.
88
I have a dream that one day, the love of Jesus will be expressible through honking.
89
I have a dream that one day, people will walk around with
WWJD
? bracelets, to remind themselves of what Jesus would do, and what Jesus would not do; such as wear a bracelet.
90
And I have a dream that one day people will be judged not by the content of their character, but by their outward adherence to a core set of talking points.
91
Libera me! Libera me! Deo gratia omnipotens, libera me!
92
Some restrictions apply.
93
Predestination does not constitute legally binding guarantee of acceptance to heaven.
94
Theses not applicable to freethinkers and savages.
95
Copyright 1517, Refor-Madness Productions Limited. All rites reserved.

CHAPTER 10

1
P
rotestantism’s user-friendly tenets sold themselves, and quickly spread through Europe like unto a wildfire of hot-cakes.
2
Jesus was delighted to see Christianity thus reinvigorated; he had begun to question the integrity of the very religion that bore his name, but seeing his faith restored restored his faith.
3
Even the church benefited in the long run, for the new competition forced it to become leaner and more responsive.
4
One can see the improvement in its handling of the Galileo affair; for after finding him guilty of heresy it took them less than 400 years to correct their mistake; in the old days it would have taken over 1,000.
5
(Raphael likes to mirth that Protestantism and Catholicism should be called Pepsism and Cokism: for they are both essentially the same sugar water with different packaging; yet each side’s partisans are fiercely loyal, and contemptuous of the other; and the more of their product they consume the more high-strung they become;
6
Until inevitably they exchange words; the words become blows; the blows escalate into an all-out Cola War; the parties exchange an eye for an eye until everyone goes blind; at which point they are suitably prepared for the taste-test.
7
Yea; the streets of Belfast are caked with blood that may as well be corn syrup.)
8
But as for me, I had no strong reaction to the Reformation one way or the other; for my mind, while everywhere, was elsewhere; and by the early 16th century I was devoting less and less of my time to the affairs of man.
9
Now, this was partly because over half the human race was by then securely in the thrall of either Christianity or Islam; and with two such pure and incorruptible faiths holding sway I knew little harm could come to the world.
10
Also, while the details of the afterlife remain classified, it reveals little to tell thee that the population of heaven has grown considerably over time; and that as it has, I have been forced to allocate a greater proportion of my resources to its upkeep.
11
It is a success problem to be sure, but a problem nonetheless; for heaven is the kind of place one wants to keep nice.
12
But I had also begun struggling with certain divine issues.
13
For I was now over 5,500 years old; and I was starting to experience some of the natural symptoms of aging.
14
I was not as omnipresent as I once had been; tasks that once took a quintillionth of a second now took a quadrillionth; I had a harder time flushing away heresy with regularity; and worst of all, I started noticing a deterioration of my short-term memory.
15
By this I most emphatically do
not
mean I was or am no longer omniscient; all knowledge in the universe is still contained within me; my mind, as always, is like unto an immeasurably vast library.
16
It is merely that some of the books are overdue; and the reference desk is not as well staffed as it used to be; and the computer system has broken down, so I am back to relying on the card catalogue;
17
Which is poorly alphabetized, and written in all the languages of the world;
18
And the library is closed.
19
The low point came in the 13th century, when I referred to the “Golden Age of Monasticism” as the “Bronze Age” to its face.
20
I tried coasting along; I told myself it was nothing serious; nothing I could not handle with a little help from me.
21
But as thou knowest, the end of any Middle Ages can betimes trigger a spiritual calamity in a sentient being; and alas, I proved no exception.
22
I looked back on what I had accomplished on earth; I reflected on where I was; I looked ahead to the time I had left before Armageddon; and I came unglued.
23
Humanity, here beginneth a dark time.

CHAPTER 11

1
F
or I have spent the last 500 years going through a midternity crisis.
2
I have been wanton; I have been irresponsible; I have done and failed to do things of which I am so ashamed that I choose to remain ignorant of them.
3
(For I have the ability to keep myself in denial; I simply set my all-powerfulness to work on my all-knowingness.)
4
But now I shall delve deeply into my deeply delvable self, and briefly chronicle the dissolution of my last few centuries, spilling many more of my heretofore sacrosanct beans;
5
In the interests of candor and commercial prurience, yes, but also in the hopes that it may steer thee away from making some of the same bad choices I have made; particularly the young believers out there, many of whom see me as some kind of role model.
6
I will begin by reminding thee of my earlier confession—that after the death of Jacob I began overseeing another universe.
7
Reader, I must now admit that that was only a partial truth.
8
I have been overseeing more than one other universe.
9
I have been overseeing 29 other universes.
10
Let me explain.
11
As the Renaissance dawned, and man for the first time since ancient Greece began developing strong interests outside our relationship, I found myself feeling somewhat superfluous.
12
I watched as great artists and writers and thinkers began to live their lives, neither in adoration nor defiance of me, but in indifference.
13
This made me angry, and as thou knowest I have wrath-management issues; but I could no longer simply manifest that wrath in the violent way I had before; not with Jesus, and H. G., and Moses, and Muhammad, and the entire heavenly bureaucracy urging restraint and watching my every move.
14
So rather than act out, I sought to relive my past glories by cavorting with many other cosmoses:
15
All younger than thee, some even less than half thy age; and most of them none too bright, having but a few stars apiece.
16
I even customized one universe cherry red!
17
Yea; as pathetic as it sounds, I redshifted that entire universe; then I got into it and drove it forward as fast as possible, just to feel the vacuum rush by.

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