Wednesday, February 15, 2006

Christ the Lord


I finished this book last weekend and wanted to post about it while it was fresh in my mind. (which happens to be a very short window of time.)

The book is about a period of time during Jesus' childhood, beginning at age 7 and not lasting much more than a year or two. The story begins in Egypt and describes his family's journey to Nazareth.

In historical fiction, the descriptive details are helpful for imagining the setting and characters involved in the story. Some of these details provided interesting background, while others challenged longheld assumptions of what things were like in this particular story.

I never really thought about what Jesus' childhood was like except for the well-known story of getting lost at the temple. I just assumed he was peacefully at home making tables with Joseph. The book included several dramatic experiences that caused me to consider the experiences that may have shaped Jesus' thoughts and feelings while he was growing up.

One of the things that I questioned is whether Joseph had been married before. I suppose it's possible, but it seemed to be a tactic used to make James the older brother of Jesus, which I don't know if he was or not. Of course, we do know that Jesus was the firtborn of Mary.

Another thing I disagreed with was that Joseph and Mary never consummated their marriage. This was explained as Mary having a consecrated life. My feeling is that, aside from the virgin birth, Mary's life was the same as other women of her time.

The aspect of the book that I enjoyed the most was considering what it must have been like for Jesus, as a child, to develop a growing awareness of his history and identity.

It made me think a lot about what I believe about Christ's human nature and his divine nature. I know that theologians have discussed this for years without coming to agreement.

My opinion (at this moment) is that while Jesus was fully human and fully divine, he chose to limit his divine abilities in order to live in a way that was fully human. I don't think this negates his divine nature while on earth, but simply reflects a choice to set aside his divine abilities for a specific purpose. An important part of this purpose was to exemplify a human life lived in obedience to the Father and empowered by the Spirit.

One of my favorite quotes from the book is this prayer:
"Father in Heaven, I won't pray for snow, Father in Heaven, I will never pray for what is not your will. Father in Heaven, I won't pray for this one to live or that one to die, oh no, never for that one to die, and never, never will I try even to make it rain or stop rain, or to make it snow, never until I understand what it means, all of it."

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

I loved the book, which I reviewed a few months back. The few things that could be argued theologically paled in the life it added the the age and culture. Glad you read it.

Peace,
Jamie

Scott Morizot said...

I loved the book! The things you found disconcerting were aspects of Anne Rice's particular tradition. She grew up Roman Catholic and it was to the Catholic church she returned. The theme of Mary having no other children is part of their theology. That Joseph had a prior wife and James was an older half-brother is one of the explanations and the path Anne Rice chose. But it was in the finely crafted intersections with 1st century Jewish culture that the book truly came to life. It breathed substance into things I had understood intellectually, but not viscerally.

As far as the Incarnation goes, I think it's pretty clear that Jesus limited access to his divine attributes in order to truly live as a human -- a little lower than the angels. As is affirmed in Hebrews, he was tempted in every way we are tempted. And a big temptation for us is not following the Father because we don't understand. So I see a picture in the gospels of the Son choosing to follow the Father each moment, whether he understood or not. He had access to more power and insight than we do, but much less than his divine nature could have offered.

Fully human and fully God. But during the Incarnation the emphasis was on the human. Did you catch his reaction after Joseph and the other men had to execute the marauder? Or to James' need to offer a sacrifice to be forgiven? Or the fact that it was a big deal for the pharisee to even take one bite of food in the presence of those who were not pharisees at the wedding? I found those bits amazing. I'm really looking forward to future books in the Christ the Lord series.

Pam Hogeweide said...

great, now you guys have provoked me to read yet another book, like I don't already have a mountain of a reading stack to conquer. :-)

Linda said...

Jamie,
Thanks for recommending it. I also really enjoy learning about the culture and setting while reading a book like this. I would be pleased if this is a series.

scott m,
I really enjoyed reading your comments. Reading about his interactions with the rabbis and pharisees was very interesting to me, especially concerning their reactions to him.

The other thing that was fascinating was to consider that learning of his identity would be a process of revelation during his childhood rather than an innate understanding.

Pam,
This was easy reading. I'm guessing you'll like it. I enjoyed it for the thoughts it provoked as well as the interesting and detailed story.