Young Messiah movie: Jesus' childhood imagined
By Rusty Wright, Special to ASSIST News Service (ANS Movie Review)
MOUNT HERMON, CA (ANS – March 3, 2016)
– Seven-year-old Jesus is accused of killing a bully … then raises him
from the dead. He restores life to a dead bird and sight to a blind
man, heals his ailing uncle. Sound familiar? Maybe not.
But
– for the sake of argument – suppose you were this Jesus. What would
you think and feel? Perhaps you'd be shocked by your power, confused
about its implications for your life. What if your parents or relatives
gave oblique answers, hiding "family secrets" from you. Would you feel
perplexed? Fearful?
Welcome to novelist Anne Rice's fictional take on Jesus' eighth year: The Young Messiah film, adapted from her novel Christ the Lord, Out of Egypt.
Rice – yes, the famous vampire novelist, a former atheist who became
convinced Jesus is God's Son – presents fascinating and touching
speculation on how the child learned who he really was.
Journey of discovery
The
historical record on Jesus' youth is sparse. So, how did he learn of
his divinity and mission? A heavenly mind zap? A prophetic
proclamation? Handwriting on a wall?
Rice
and the filmmakers take us on a hypothetical journey of discovery
inside the mind of the young Jesus. They sensitively portray his love
for his mother Mary and desire to feel safe in her arms, his respect for
her husband Joseph, his playtime adventures. We see delight in
childhood friendship, curiosity in learning, sadness over violence.
He
ponders clues regarding his birth that occasionally slip from
relatives' unguarded lips – pieces to the identity puzzle he feels
compelled to solve. How he solves it is an artful story that I won't
spoil for you.
Historical fiction
The Young Messiah is, of course, historical fiction. The New Testament is largely silent about Jesus' youth. At age twelve, he amazed
religious leaders with his wisdom. Gospel writer Luke records, "Jesus
grew in wisdom and in stature and in favor with God and all the people."
Rice adapted the resurrected bully and bird stories from The Infancy Gospel of Thomas, which is apocryphal (i.e., of doubtful authenticity). She admits these stories are "legends."
Rice's spiritual journey
Anne Rice's personal spiritual journey has been circuitous. Raised a Catholic, she became an atheist in university. Vampire novels propelled her to fame.
The
Jews' survival over the centuries became the fascinating "mystery that
drew me back to God. It set into motion the idea that there may in fact
be God." She returned to faith and Catholicism in 1998.
Writings of Bible skeptics significantly influenced her. She says
many "lacked coherence" and "were full of conjecture. Some books were
no more than assumptions piled upon assumptions. Absurd conclusions were
reached on the basis of little or no data at all. …I discovered in this
field some of the worst and most biased scholarship I'd ever read."
In 2002, Rice dedicated her life to writing for God. Christ the Lord, Out of Egypt (2005) and Christ the Lord, The Road to Cana (2008) sought
"to bring to life for the reader Jesus Christ, the Second Person of the
Blessed Trinity, and the God who loved us so much that He came to live
amongst us for over thirty years before He died for our salvation on the
Cross, and rose from the dead."
Vampires calling?
Her vampire world seemed
behind her: "I found what the characters in the vampire novels were
looking for. They were groping in the darkness; they lived in a world
without God. I found God…."
In 2010, frustrated over issues including bishops' opposition to same-sex marriage, she renounced her church membership but said she remained devoted to Christ and wouldn't revive her vampire writings.
"I will never return to that," she declared.
"Those were books I wrote when I was an atheist and they reflected my
feelings of being lost in a world without God, and I'm not that person
now. … I don't want to write about people who kill and drink blood to
survive."
In 2014, she returned to writing vampire novels, explaining
that in the interim her vampire characters had not been "talking to
me." "Rage and anger" with Hollywood over stalled vampire movie deals
made her want to write more vampire novels. She began reading her own,
and "then he [Lestat, her vampire protagonist] started speaking" and the
ideas flowed.
I’m not exactly sure where Anne Rice's spiritual quest is at the moment. But The Young Messiah presents an entertaining and emotional look at the one she's claimed is Christ the Lord.
Rated PG-13 (USA) "for some violence and thematic elements."
www.TheYoungMessiah.com Opens March 11 (USA) International opening dates
Copyright © 2016 Rusty Wright
Photo
captions: 1) Author Anne Rice (Image: Public Domain). 2) The young
Jesus. 3) The very young Messiah. 4) Wise men seek him. 5) Rusty Wright.
About
the writer: Rusty Wright is an author and lecturer who has spoken on
six continents. He holds Bachelor of Science (psychology) and Master of
Theology degrees from Duke and Oxford universities, respectively. www.RustyWright.com
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Editors: For access to higher resolution versions of these images and more, check here, here, here and here.
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