Audiobook - This morning I started listening to Anne Rice's second book in her Christ the Lord trilogy. The first one "Out of Egypt" chronicled Jesus as a young boy moving back from Egypt to his home in Israel. In this just released followup the novel starts before the Baptism of John and leads up to the wedding at Cana.
In each of these books Anne blends a lot of research into the history of that era with a theoretical first person view of being Jesus "discovering" who He is. Theologians have often debated about the twin natures of Jesus, His humanity and His divinity, and the integration between the two. While on one hand Jesus was God Incarnate, He did not talk just seconds after birth. He had to experience all of our humanity and that includes our own growth, maturing, and self discovery.
In this book Jesus is in his late twenties prior to starting His public ministry. Among the threads of the story, Anne brings up an interesting point. Jesus is almost thirty and yet is not married. For someone in His position at that time, this is pretty unusual. His older step brother James is strongly encouraging Him to marry, in particular an attractive young woman within their little community named Abigail. We get the sense that Jesus has all of the human desires of affection towards her, yet He is controlling His desires so that they don't get the best of Him. While He doesn't seem to know all of the details of what His future entails, He "knows" that eventually where He goes, a wife will not be able to follow. He "knows" a wife (and later children) is out of the question even if His humanity would desire the consolation of a good wife. Out of His filial love for Abigail, He actually recommends Abigail consider a friend of Jesus who would like to marry her.
So far I'm just a third through the book. There's far more to it than this one plot line, but I found it the most intriguing so far. As with the first novel, there are still the rumors floating around about the incidents that occurred near Jesus' birth. There are still the struggles with the Roman authority and the Jews' dissatisfaction with being under their control. We see the relationship between Jesus and His mother Mary and His father Joseph. We see the culture of that time and some of the ways that it contrasts with our own.
So now that I finished The Dolorous Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ last Friday, this is the novel I'll be working my way through over the next week or two of my long commutes to the office. It is a work of historical fiction. I don't take it as authoritative, but as a fun thought experiment of what it might have been like to be Jesus at that time.
I continued listening this morning. One of the threads of the story now is a dialog between Jesus and one of the old wise Scribes, now retired from service in the Temple. The Scribe knew Jesus when he was a young man of 12 years and how He amazed the elders of the Temple with His insight. He asks Jesus why He became a simple carpenter when He had so much potential to "do so much more" in service to the Temple. The Scribe also knew of the supernatural events which surrounded Jesus' birth. Like others he is puzzled why Jesus is such a common tradesman and not living up to the prophesies or the potential they saw in Him as a student of the Temple.
Posted by: Scott at March 11, 2008 09:03 AMI realized today that the maiden in the story is "Avigail" not "Abigail". I attribute my mishearing the narrator to car/road noise combined with my own biases of having a daughter named "Abigail".
Posted by: Scott at March 12, 2008 11:29 AMLast night I heard the scene of the temptation of the Lord after His forty days in the desert. It was the best writing in the book thus far. His dialog with the devil was excellent.
I'm down to the last of the six CDs in the set. I'm almost wishing that this was a longer work, like the Harry Potter books. (17+ hours)
Posted by: Scott at March 13, 2008 11:00 AMI finished the book on Friday morning about 5 minutes before arriving at my Marlborough office. The book ended well. I don't think I'm giving too much away if I say that Avigail is the bride at the wedding at Cana where Jesus performs his first public miracle and launches his public ministry.
Overall it is a quick "read" with rich, descriptive narration. It is a work of fiction with many plot elements completely made up but it is always respectful of Christian tradition and our historical knowledge of the time. It doesn't try to introduce "scandalous" ideas like Dan Brown's DaVinci Code did. I look forward to when she finishes the trilogy.
Posted by: Scott at March 15, 2008 06:26 AM