Tag Archives: Theology

Book Review: Paul, a novel by Walter Wangerin, Jr.

Walter Wangerin, Jr. is a prolific religious author: thirty books for young and old– both fiction and non-fiction—essays, articles, and commentaries.  Educated as a Lutheran Pastor, he was the well known radio voice of Lutheran Vespers for many years.  He holds a professorial chair at Valparaiso University.

Three of his novels are Biblical fiction—well known stories from Scripture retold by a master storyteller.  He is not shy in his choice of subjects: The Book of God; Paul, a novel; and Jesus, a novel.  The second of the three, Paul, a novel, was published in 2001, and is the account of Paul the apostle to the Gentiles.

As a consummate storyteller, Wangerin evokes the sights, sounds, and smells of the first century Roman Empire.  Paul and his supporting cast are lifted from the pages of the New Testament to become short and tall, bold and shy, bald or hairy.  Wangerin’s novel humanizes Christian icons.

Yet, for all the picture-painting performed by Wangerin, the characterization is thin.  While we may visualize the characters, I’m not sure that we come to know their inner conflicts, motivations, fears and desires.  There is little depth beyond three dimensions.  Perhaps Wangerin’s shifting use of first person point of view contributes to flatness of character.   He has chosen to write, not in the voice of Paul, but from the perspective of no less than nine supporting characters as narrators.  We see Paul through their eyes, which do not penetrate far beneath the skin.  Wangerin’s method attempts to create a composite view of Paul the apostle, but the effect of multiple narrators, each taking their turn before moving offstage only to return again and again, is often bumpy.

Paul the apostle encountered Prisca and Aquila, her husband, in Corinth, and they continued on with him to Ephesus as important members of his growing entourage.  Already followers of the Christ from Rome, where they had come under the scrutiny of the Emperor, the husband and wife team of tentmakers had been exiled to Corinth.  Prisca is one the major narrators in Wangerin’s novel.

A second is James, the brother of Jesus, who ascended to leadership of the Jerusalem based followers of Jesus after the crucifixion.  Wangerin’s instincts are solid in assigning an important role to James in his novel, but he misses the opportunity to probe conflict in the early church.  Like the book of Acts, which Wangerin follows without challenge, the novel glosses over the evidence of harsh disagreement between James and Paul the apostle, between the Jewish Jesus movement in Jerusalem and Paul’s Gentile mission.  Not that Wangerin avoids it, but it is conflict without rancor or consequence.  He drops delicious hints that beg for more.

A third recurring narrator is Seneca, the Roman philosopher and dramatist who served as tutor and advisor to Nero when he became a teenaged Emperor.  Seneca’s purpose as narrator is to provide setting in the first century Roman Empire.

Barnabas was Paul the apostle’s compatriot for many years in Antioch and companion on an early missionary journey through the island of Cyprus and the province of Phrygia on the Anatolian mainland (modern day Turkey).  He is the fourth recurring narrator.

The fifth is Timothy, the son of a Roman soldier and a Jewish mother, who joined Paul’s missionary band in his home city of Lystra and remained a primary aide de camp and secretary thereafter.

The sixth is Luke, the author of the gospel by the same name and also of Acts.  Wangerin accepts the traditional view that he was a travel companion of Paul the apostle.  Wangerin’s Lucan voice emulates that of the gospel.

The final recurring narrator is Titus, the uncircumcised Gentile who accompanied Paul the apostle and Barnabas to Jerusalem for a face to face meeting with the “pillars” to resolve the issue of Torah observance and especially circumcision.  He later joined Paul in Ephesus.

Two other lesser characters make one time appearances as narrator for a total of nine.

Paul also appears as narrator in several chapters–not as speaker but as writer.  In these chapters, Wangerin paraphrases Paul’s Corinthian and Galatian correspondence. 

In the end, that is an apt summary of the novel as a whole: a paraphrase of the traditional, Biblical narrative about Paul the apostle.  An elaborate and aesthetic paraphrase to be sure, but a paraphrase nevertheless.  And that is clearly Wangerin’s choice, for there is ample evidence throughout that he has done his research well, and he would be aware of the scholarly consensus that the book of Acts is unreliable as history; yet, he chose not to go there.

For those who prefer, or at least are content, to hear again the traditional stories but gussied up by a master storyteller, experienced and adept at his craft, this novel will be much appreciated.  For others who prefer a more nuanced interpretation of Paul the apostle and his primary role in Christian origins, the novel may not probe much deeper than an adult Sunday School class.

A Wretched Man novel: the first review is in.

current copy resized Writing can be a solitary endeavor, but when we share our words with the world, it can be as scary as dropping one’s pants in the midst of a crowd (thanks to fellow Loft writer Jim Lundin for the simile).  My novel is now at the point where others are reading it, and that is daunting.

My publisher has been busy sending out “galley copies” (which they refer to as ‘”advance reader” copies) to potential reviewers.  With a novel release set for next February, we are hoping to generate buzz and to obtain some favorable comments to use in marketing.  Yesterday, the first comment arrived.  Here it is:

A Wretched Man is a powerful recreation of the world of Paul, James and Peter that pulls no punches! In this highly readable novel, based on contemporary scholarship, Paul comes alive as a complex individual. What accounts for his visceral attack on Torah? What was behind his careful avoidance of James and Jesus’ first followers in Jerusalem? What drove him on to the ends of the earth, setting up the infrastructure of a new religion? It’s all here as Holmen explores Paul’s inner turmoil and the likely motivation behind Paul’s beliefs and actions. Agree or disagree, this book opens up the reality of the world of Paul and his contemporaries in a way no other work does. Real individuals, with passions and agendas, step on to the world stage.”

         Barrie Wilson, Professor, Religious Studies, York University, Toronto. Author How Jesus Became Christian.

Whew.  That wasn’t so bad.

New Title: A Wretched Man, a novel of Paul the apostle

Based upon discussions with my publisher, I have decided to drop The Jewish Gentile as my novel’s title.  The new title is A Wretched Man, a novel of Paul the apostle.  This is based on the famous line in Paul’s letter to the Romans, “Wretched Man that I am!  Who will save me from this body of death?”

The publisher is performing the final edit, and we are discussing cover designs.

Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel

Heschel and King
Rabbi Heschel is one my favorite authors. The picture above shows the white haired Heschel at Selma with Martin Luther King Jr, John Lewis, Ralph Abernathy, and Ralph Bunche (reprinted from Susannah Heschel’s collection on the Dartmouth College website). One of the dozen or so quotes on my favorite quotations page is from the rabbi who was an activist a generation ago although the quote relates to religious ritual, symbol and myth rather than activism … “all conception is symbolization,” sayeth the rabbi.

I mention him here because of a blogpost regarding the Missouri legislature naming a highway after the rabbi in response to a hate group adopting the highway. See the National Democratic Jewish Council’s blog for details.

WAY TO GO MISSOURI!!

Book Review: The First Paul by Borg and Crossan (Part 3)

In part 1, I introduced co-authors Borg and Crossan, and in part 2, I discussed their majority view treatment of authentic Pauline letters vs pseudo-Pauline writings that came later as “correctives” to the radical Paul, in the authors’ view. Today, in part 3, I will discuss their less orthodox view that the Roman Emperor and the Empire were Paul’s veiled enemies in his writings, and this discussion will include links to a number of discussions of this issue.

Borg and Crossan are first and foremost Jesus scholars who offer a low christology that is less divine and more human, less other-worldly than here and now, more about a social reformer than an end-times avenger. Whether one agrees or disagrees is not relevant to this book, but what is important to note is their attempt to have Paul fit the same mold. This is where they part company with their scholarly peers.

Read more …

Book Review: The First Paul by Borg and Crossan (Part 2)

Tell slaves to be submissive to their masters and to give satisfaction in every respect; they are not to talk back, not to pilfer, but to show complete and perfect fidelity … Titus 2:9-10a NRSV

How can these words of Paul that were used to justify slavery a century and a half ago be excused as part of “Reclaiming the Radical Visionary”?

Read more …