Tag Archives: Anne Rice

Christ the Lord: The Road to Cana (Anne Rice)

Rating: [rate 5.0]

Christ the Lord: The Road to Cana (Anne Rice)It’s a winter of no rain, endless dust and talk of trouble in Judea. All who know and love Jesus find themselves waiting for some sign of the path he will eventually take. After his baptism, he is at last ready to confront his destiny. At the wedding at Cana, he takes water and transforms it into rred wine. Thus, he’s recognized as the anointed one and called by God the Father to begin a ministry that will transform an unsuspecting world.

I swear, the blurb at the back of the book does not even come an inch to the actual story inside the pages. It doesn’t even give any hint of the conflict and the trouble and the miracles inside the story that you really have to read this (relatively short) book if you want to know what this is about.

Ever since I read Christ the Lord: Out of Egypt, I’ve been excited to read the next installment in the series. I saw this one in hardbound for a year and resisted to buy it because it was too expensive, so the moment I saw the paperback version, I bought it immediately, excited to read how Anne Rice portrayed Jesus’ next few years.

The story doesn’t pick up right after where the first book ends, though. It picks the story up again when Jesus was already thirty, unmarried, surrounded by his brothers and sisters and nephews and nieces. He was a carpenter together with his (half) brother James, and across their place lived Avigail, his kinswoman, who he was sort of in love with.

Now I know that is something kind of like The Da Vinci Code contains, but it’s not. One of the things that readers should remember in reading this is that it’s not necessarily true, and it may just be a plot device to get the story going. The thing about the first two novels in the series is that it gives us a glimpse of Jesus’ humanity, on how he came to terms with his divinity all in his Father’s time. The novel tries to fill in the blanks in between the times not mentioned in the Bible. Like I said, it’s not necessarily true, so don’t consider the novel as your new Bible, but just something to think about.

Regardless, it’s another beautiful work. I love seeing Jesus called as “Yeshua” — it’s an endearing name. I love it when he and Mary get to talk, like they both share a quiet calm about them and a knowledge of who he really is, despite what everyone else around them is asking or telling them. I liked it when Yeshua stole to the olive grove to have time for himself, or when he appreciated the beauty around him. I liked reading about how Yeshua struggled with his emotions as a man, but still pressed on and continued to be connected with his Father. You know how whenever Jesus went to a quiet place or to fast, it seemed like it was a sparkling calm picture and he was just kneeling down, praying with peace etched on his face? Well, in this story Anne Rice painted a different picture — a picture of Jesus struggling with his Father about his humanity, about what he is supposed to do and what he wanted to do, but ultimately still following his Father’s will. It was a more realistic picture, as we have to remember that Jesus is still human as he is also God. In a way the story inside the book made me relate to Jesus more, that even he can struggle with what God wants, but still follow His will, fully trusting in the Father.

This book covers more Bible stories than the previous one — starting from Jesus’ baptism with John the Baptist to his temptation at the desert to Mary of Magdala, to the calling of his first disciples and finally ending at the wedding at Cana. The ending kind of feels rushed, like everything happened too quickly after the other, but then again maybe I just don’t have a sense of time when I read the Bible. :P

Suffice to say, I loved this book, and I can’t wait to get my hands on the next one. :) I bet I’d be crying bucketfuls on the next. :)

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Christ the Lord: Out of Egypt (Anne Rice)

Rating: [rate 4.5]

Christ the Lord: Out of Egypt by Anne Rice

With the Holy Land in turmoil, seven-year-old Jesus and his family leave Egypt for the dangerous road home to Jerusalem. As they travel, the boy tries to unlock the secret of his birth and comprehend his terrifying power to work miracles. Anne Rice’s dazzling, kaleidoscopic novel, based on the gospels and the most respected New Testament scholarship, summons up the voice, the presence, and the words of Jesus, allowing hi to tell his own story as he struggles to grasp the holy purpose of his life.

Reading this book reminds me of one Brian Littrell song, Wish:

For just a moment, I wish I could have been there
To see Your first step, hear Your very first word
Tell me, did You ever fall and scrape Your knee?
Did You know that Your wounds would one day heal the world?

For just one moment I wish I could have seen You growing
Learn in the ways of a carpenter’s son
Just a little boy, gazing at the stars
Did You remember creating everyone?

If You pass by, would I see the Child or the King?
Would I have known?

It’s funny that I got this book around Christmas, which should have been the perfect book to read then. But during that time, I was reading A Lineage of Grace by Francine Rivers, and Mary’s story there was more perfect for Christmas since it talks about Christ’s birth. This book focuses more on Jesus’ childhood, the year where he was seven almost eight.

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Word overflow on a weekend

I realized lately that working in a telecommunications company wipes out the fun for me about anything related to mobile technology. For example, last Friday, I was holding SIM cards and cellphone load all day to prepare for this User Acceptance Testing I was conducting. A few months ago, I would’ve been really amazed at the amount of credits and SIM cards I was holding then…but at the end of the day last Friday, I was sick of it. Being the one who goes through the UAT of the promos we have, by the time the promo comes out in the market, I have no intention of taking advantage of anymore because I have used it a lot of times before it was released and I know every bug I’ve encountered that other people might see too.

Or like one of my officemates, who holds different kinds of cellphones everyday to test. She gets to see and hold and play with the latest Nokia, Ericsson, Samsung and Motorola handsets, and she can tell you which phone is the best to suit your lifestyle. But when we talk, she tells me she’s tired of seeing all those phones because they’re all the same and there’s always something missing with the new unit. Being around new cellphones everday wiped out the amazement and wonder she used to get whenever a new unit comes out.

Hay, this is the work life, I guess.

I’ve made up my mind to go on gimmicks every weekend as this year started, and so far, I’ve been doing just so. Last year, I preferred staying at home during the weekends so I could rest, but I end up bumming around all day. For the past month, I’ve managed to go out every weekend and not be a party pooper. :P

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