Quarantine

Johnson, Luke Timothy

Jesus in the desert Luke Timothy Johnson II H im Crace has pulled off the literary equivalent of a perfect triple-triple jump in iceskating. He has written a novel that has Jesus as its...

...The story has moments of pure beauty and ones of dreadful cruelty...
...Here are his fictional premises: First, the Judean desert is a place where people would spend a forty-day period of quarantine for religious purposes fasting in the ordinary manner--abstaining from food in the day but eating in the evening...
...Jesus enters the highest and most remote cave to test his faith in God...
...third, Jesus and a collection of seekers (two women and four men) find themselves accidentally caught up in each other's lives...
...Unlike all those lives of Jesus and historical Jesus reconstructions that end up making Jesus seem like a cardboard figure compared to the compelling and mysterious portrayals of him in the Gospels, Crace's tale draws the reader into an imaginative rendering that is so daring, so compelling, and so original, that in it Jesus really does seem human...
...Well, not entirely by accident...
...In contrast to all those fictional renderings of Jesus (for example, by Kazantzakis) that try to make him human by making him sexual, and only succeed in making him dull, Crace portrays Jesus as a youthful mystic whose intoxication with God in prayer draws him ever deeper into a divine addiction...
...Jesus, however, defines uncontrollability...
...He has written a novel that has Jesus as its main character yet avoids reminding the reader of the Bible...
...he writes in the cave floor all the words he knows...
...This changes everything...
...L-~ Luke Timothy Johnson is the author of The Real Jesus (HarperSan Francisco...
...But I can say that the grave dug for the dying Musa--that served also as a surprising cistern to sustain the pilgrims ends up serving still another function...
...He eats nothing, drinks nothing, will not leave the cave...
...Miri wants Musa dead, and is out digging a grave when Jesus enters the tent...
...There is some small part of Musa in awe of the one who healed him, but it is swallowed (as are all his fears) by the rage to dominate and control...
...Crace has constructed a story about Jesus that is at once utterly different from that in the Gospels yet utterly believable, that on the surface recasts everything yet at its depth somehow retains everything...
...Although Matthew and Luke narrate the encounters between Jesus and the tempter after his time of fasting, neither they nor Mark do more than report that Jesus fasted for forty days (Mark 1:12-13...
...He finds it in Jesus' fasting in the wilderness...
...Badu, the half-wild villager whose reasons for being there are never entirely clear since he cannot make himself understood...
...In that respect, he was transformed by God like other boys his age were changed by girls...
...Musa is monstrous in size and appetite, driven by the passions of craven fear and murderous rage, a beater and raper of women, whose cunning captivates his companions and manipulates them in service to his fantasies: Jesus will be his ultimate product, his most spectacular traveling-salesman story...
...Matt...
...And that everyone gets changed...
...Aphas, the elderly Jew with cancer who desperately seeks a cure...
...As Jesus breaks from his boyhood, he is the exact opposite of Musa: totally Commonweal | 8 May 8, 1998 lacking in calculation, heedless of consequences, stripping himself of food, water, clothing, testing his experience against his fantasies, forging possible ways of being a prophet like those of old, and finally releasing reason itself as his wasted body drains juice also from his soul...
...Marta, the voluptuous yet barren and scorned wife who seeks God's gift of fertility...
...Though he never leaves the cave, never accepts the invitations of the other pilgrims, Jesus is the still point around which all the plot's movements revolve...
...He was an egg immersed in boiling water, a fusing and dividing trinity of yoke and white and shell...
...This time of "quarantine" provides the occasion for Crace's invention...
...Luke 4:1-13...
...Crace's portrayal of Jesus is the novel's most intriguing aspect...
...He describes Jesus in prayer: "There were occasions, more mystifying, feverish, and blissful, when the language was unknown, a tripping, spittlebasted tongue, plosive and percussive and high pitched...he might feel his spirit soften and solidify at once...
...Needing a final drink of water before his total fast, Jesus enters the tent of Musa the trader, who has been abandoned to die of a fever by his caravan, tended only by his pregnant and abused wife Miri...
...4:1-11...
...And in its own way, is gospel...
...second, Jesus is a young man barely past adolescence who is eager to be free of his village life and who embraces his fast in an extravagant and absolute fashion...
...What happens to Jesus, and what happens to those whose lives for a period of quarantine hovered around his singular grasp for God, t leave to your reading...
...At the start of the quarantine, Jesus trails far behind the troupe of pilgrims heading toward the desert caves: Shim, the welltraveled religious adept seeking to add one more ordeal to his list of accomplishments...
...Like all good apocryphal authors, Crace seeks a gap or seam in the biblical narrative to exploit...
...Musa rises from his deathbed determined to use this wonderworker as the means of recovering his fortune, directing all his guile to this end...
...Jesus grows bored in his fast and plays board games with pebbles...
...Sipping from the water bag, Jesus hears the dying groans of Musa and, almost casually, blesses him...
...The novel's epigraph quotes the opinion of two doctors concerning the possibility of a human surviving such an absolute fast without supernatural assistance...
...In the extremity of starvation, he is afraid of what his heedless love has done...
...Commonweal | 9 May 8, 1998...
...It is, I assure you, different from anything you have yet imagined...
...Readers are drawn into the ensuing struggle by viewing the actions and sharing the fantasies spun by the minor male characters, the more prominent female characters, and above all by the agonists Musa and Jesus, the tempter and the tempted--they also have fantasies...
...But it never loses hold of the reader...

Vol. 125 • May 1998 • No. 9


 
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