Posted on 11/26/2005 4:22:35 PM PST by rhema
bump.
Perilous project
Portraying Christ in literature poses special problems. How to portray someone who is both God and Man? Some authors evoke His deity, portraying His transcendence and majesty or turning Him into a mystical inner presence. But they miss His humanity, that the Word became flesh and dwelt among us. Other authors evoke His humanity, portraying Him as a flesh-and-blood man, often sentimentalized. But they fall short of conveying His divinity.
But Anne Rice, in her novel Christ the Lord: Out of Egypt (Knopf, 2005), hits the orthodox balance. She portrays Jesus as a 7-year-old child, but He is more than a child. He plays, He cries, He is dependent on His parents. But when He yearns to see snow, it snows. When His uncle is sick, the young Jesus heals him. Throughout the novel, Jesus tries to understand who He is, piecing clues together and asking questions. But, as a prophet tells Him, "The day will come when You will have to give us the answers."
The only potential problem with Mrs. Rice's novel is the project itself. She tells the story of the 7-year-old Jesus in the first person, from Christ's point of view. Entering into the mind of Christ, even when He was so young, might seem disturbingly presumptuous. So is making up episodes in His life. This project is indeed fraught with peril. But those objections are softened by the author's reverence and her care to be biblically and theologically correct. Out of Egypt can best be appreciated as the work of a skillful writer meditating on the Incarnation and the Person of Jesus Christ.
Source material for Christ's childhood is scanty, so Mrs. Rice makes use of what she has, including apocryphal books excluded from the canon of Scripture. This too is fraught with peril. But Mrs. Rice told WORLD that she herself considers the accounts to be "legends," and she uses the details while draining them of any heresy. For example, in an apocryphal gospel, the Christ child strikes a bully dead. Lots of schoolchildren would like to do that, but it feels uncharacteristic of the New Testament Jesus. In this novel, a bully hits Jesus, who feels "power go out of Me." The boy dies, like Uzzah touching the ark, but then later Jesus, sorrowing with the boy's family, raises him from the dead.
Instead of gnosticism, what we get in this novel is a richly textured imagining of historical reality. Mrs. Rice synthesizes the findings of historians, archeologists, and anthropologists to give us a vivid portrait of everyday life in Bible timeshousehold customs, the observance of Jewish law, what it was like to worship in the Temple. Her portrayal of life in a large extended familywhich does characterize tribal societiesis particularly charming. It also makes at least imaginable Mrs. Rice's Catholic conviction (shared by many of the Reformers) that Jesus' "brothers and sisters" were not Mary's children, but a product of adoptions within the kinship system.
Scripture says that Joseph and his family left Egypt when Herod died, but feared his son Archelaus and so moved to Galilee. Mrs. Rice fills in the history, recounting the horrific bloodbaths and insurrections sparked by this change of rule. She portrays the rebels not sympathetically but as plundering bandits. In this anarchy, the Romans are welcomed at first as restorers of order, though they often crucify the innocent with the guilty.
Through these tumultuous times, Jesus grows in wisdom and in stature and in favor with God and man. We see Him being exposed to things He would later use in His ministrylilies of the field, living water, moneychangers, weddings, crucifixions. When Jesus, now 8, finally learns that He is the Son of God, He realizes at the same time that He is "born to die." The setting for this epiphany is significant: He is in the Temple, standing in front of the altar of sacrifice.
Gene Edward Veith
bump to me
Well....this is excellent! She's been prayed for, that much is obvious. I've prayed for her and known people who do.
So....I just might buy her book!
It is well known that her son Christopher is gay. I wonder how she deals with that in light of her new found faith.
She probably "interprets" religion.
I.E. picks and chooses what she likes and doesn't like.
Kind of like a "Cafeteria Christian".
Didn't she also used to write soft-porn under another pen-name?
Think I may go buy the book. Anyone here read it?
Anne Rampling--and the stuff was not bad at all. Of course, it was bad. But also, not bad.
Unchristian attitudes drive more from Christ than win for him. Judge not.
Being gay is not against God's word, practicing it is. If you had a son, or daughter, who was gay would you abandon them? Jesus would be the last person to abandon anyone, gay or straight. How would you handle it?
The Angels are rejoicing.
I don't know, maybe the same way Dick Cheney deals with his gay daughter?
She probably "interprets" religion. I.E. picks and chooses what she likes and doesn't like. Kind of like a "Cafeteria Christian". This is an un-Christian like thing to say. You know nothing about her but her judge just the same. Do you think Christ would do this? Maybe he chose this woman to write about Him, can you prove he didn't? Those of us who have adversity in our lives come out of it better people if we survive.
Would you abandon your child if they were gay? If you did I wouldn't think Christ would admire you very much.
And the same way that every parent deals with having a sinner as a child?
Her books are beautiful, but repellent because of their flirt with a romantic and decadent occult. But through them lies a desire for true spirituality, for meaning, and for redemption.
I am not surprised to find her searching after Christ. I pray she finds good teachers.
So much of her early writing came from the wild grief from the death of her little girl--and Rice was so young at the time! I didn't know Stan had died, and so long ago, too. I would have thought I'd known. A life visited by much grief.
My L-rd Y'shua has commanded us to judge.
John 7:24 "..Stop judging by mere appearances, and make a right judgment.
B'shem Y'shua
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