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Reading Jesus is a personal journey through the fundamental Biblical stories. As celebrated author Mary Gordon ponders the intense strangeness of a deity in human form, unresolved moral ambiguities within the text, and the problem posed to her as an enlightened reader by the miracle of the Resurrection. What she rediscovers—and reinterprets with her signature candor, intelligence, and straightforwardness—is a rich store of overlapping, sometimes conflicting teachings that feel both familiar and tantalizingly elusive.
From the Trade Paperback edition.
Introduction xi
I These Fragments I Have Shored Against My Ruins
1 The Running Father, the Starving Son, the Fatted Calf, the Husks, the Unbearable Question 7
2 Swine 16
3 The Burning Tongue, the Barren Womb 22
4 Perfume, Hair 30
5 A Dream of Whiteness 38
6 The Dark Garden 43
7 The Fig Tree 56
8 The Temptation in the Desert 63
9 The Writing on the Ground 75
10 The Blessed 83
II The Problem of Jesus: Reading Through Anger, Confusion, Disappointment, Loss
1 The Problem of Miracles 95
2 The Problem of Asceticism: Do We Want to Live Like This" 115
3 The Problem of Perfection: Could We Live the Way He Says Even If We Wanted To" 125
4 The Problem of Apocalypticism 136
5 Contradiction, Conundrum, Paradox 145
6 The Tainted Text: The Problem of the Jews 160
7 The Problem of Divinity 172
8 Wrestling 177
III The Seven Last Words and the Last Words
Epilogue 205
JohnMulqueen
Posted November 13, 2009
Mary Gordon has written an intelligent, very readable, often insightful commentary on the four Gospels, that is more and less than it claims to be. Gordon writes only about Matthew, Mark, Luke & John leaving out Paul and the Acts of the Apostles because they are more about theology than a narrative of Jesus' life and person (but what is John if not that, certainly he is not a biographical narrative?). She says she does so because she is a writer interested in narrative, and a writer's sensibility to the words of the Gospels shows. Her comments about Jesus showing a concern for women in Mark were unexpected,so was her explication of the whithered fig tree: it shows not all is good even in the world of the Gospel. She relies a lot on biblical scholars, somewhat unexpected given her claim to read like a writer. But this is an excellent book, especially for Catholics unused to Biblical studies.
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Overview
Reading Jesus is a personal journey through the fundamental Biblical stories. As celebrated author Mary Gordon ponders the intense strangeness of a deity in human form, unresolved moral ambiguities within the text, and the problem posed to her as an enlightened reader by the miracle of the Resurrection. What she rediscovers—and reinterprets with her signature candor, intelligence, and straightforwardness—is a rich store of overlapping, sometimes conflicting teachings that feel both familiar and tantalizingly elusive.
From the Trade Paperback edition.