Introduction
This essay explores the statement about human nature in Gabriel García Márquez’s short story “A Very Old Man with Enormous Wings” (1968), focusing on the author’s critique of the disconnect between the Catholic Church and everyday people. The central thesis posits that, since the Catholic Church appears distant and supernatural to its lower constituents, the everyday person in García Márquez’s narrative does not see a relationship with God as attainable and, therefore, struggles to express love or compassion toward others. Through an analysis of the story’s characters, symbolism, and thematic undertones, this essay argues that García Márquez places the blame on the Church’s inaccessibility, which fosters spiritual alienation and moral failure among the laity. The discussion will be structured around the portrayal of human indifference, the Church’s symbolic absence, and the resulting moral implications.
Human Indifference and the Failure of Compassion
García Márquez paints a stark picture of human nature through the villagers’ treatment of the old man with enormous wings, who is presumed to be an angel. Rather than showing reverence or kindness, the villagers exploit him for profit and spectacle, caging him like a circus animal (García Márquez, 1968). This indifference reflects a deeper inability to love or empathize, arguably stemming from a lack of spiritual grounding. For instance, Pelayo and Elisenda, the couple who discover the old man, prioritize financial gain over moral duty, revealing a community detached from Christian values of charity. This behavior suggests that without a tangible connection to divine teachings, human nature defaults to selfishness and pragmatism. The villagers’ actions underscore García Márquez’s critique of a society that, though nominally Catholic, lacks the moral compass a closer relationship with faith might provide.
The Catholic Church as a Distant Entity
The Catholic Church’s role in the story is notably symbolic through its absence and ineffectiveness. When the villagers seek guidance about the old man, the local priest, Father Gonzaga, is skeptical and awaits direction from higher ecclesiastical authorities, who never provide a definitive answer (García Márquez, 1968). This delay and uncertainty highlight the Church’s remoteness from the everyday believer. As Bell-Villada (1990) notes, García Márquez often portrays organized religion as an institution more concerned with bureaucracy than with nurturing faith among the common people. Indeed, the Church’s inability to offer clarity or compassion in the story mirrors the villagers’ own spiritual confusion. By presenting the Church as distant—both physically through its hierarchical delays and ideologically through its detachment—García Márquez seems to place the blame for the community’s moral failings on this institutional disconnect.
Moral Implications of Spiritual Alienation
The spiritual alienation caused by the Church’s inaccessibility has profound moral implications in the narrative. Without a personal connection to God, the villagers cannot internalize values like love and compassion, leading to their mistreatment of the old man. Furthermore, the story implies that faith, when reduced to superstition or ritual without personal meaning, fails to guide ethical behavior. As Williams (1984) suggests, García Márquez critiques a Latin American Catholicism that often prioritizes form over substance, leaving the faithful spiritually adrift. This alienation is evident when the villagers turn to a spider-woman—a more sensational and accessible figure—over the enigmatic old man, indicating their preference for immediate, tangible wonders over complex spiritual truths. Thus, García Márquez illustrates how the Church’s detachment fosters a moral vacuum among its followers.
Conclusion
In “A Very Old Man with Enormous Wings,” Gabriel García Márquez makes a poignant statement about human nature, suggesting that spiritual alienation—caused by the Catholic Church’s distant and supernatural image—prevents everyday people from cultivating a relationship with God and, consequently, from loving others. Through the villagers’ indifference, the Church’s symbolic absence, and the resulting moral failings, he places the blame on institutional religion’s failure to connect with its constituents. This critique invites reflection on how faith, when inaccessible or abstract, can leave individuals morally unmoored. The story’s implications extend beyond its Latin American context, prompting broader questions about the role of religious institutions in nurturing personal and communal ethics. Ultimately, García Márquez challenges readers to consider the consequences of a spirituality that remains out of reach for the common person.
References
- Bell-Villada, Gene H. (1990) García Márquez: The Man and His Work. University of North Carolina Press.
- García Márquez, Gabriel. (1968) “A Very Old Man with Enormous Wings.” In Leaf Storm and Other Stories. Harper & Row.
- Williams, Raymond L. (1984) Gabriel García Márquez. Twayne Publishers.