The Messenger
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- $14.99
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- $14.99
Publisher Description
From the bestselling author of Joshua and A Portrait of Jesus comes a moving, eye-opening parable about a messenger sent to reawaken faith, love, and compassion in a world that has strayed from the lessons of the Gospels.
In this Image paperback original, Joseph Girzone once again weaves a story that will transform readers' understanding of Jesus' teaching and change the way they put that teaching into action in their own lives. The Messenger is the story of the Kingdom of Light created by God on Earth. This kingdom started as a small community and grew to encompass vast numbers of people of every race and nation, transcending the boundaries of all worldly realms. But with the passage of time, the message of peace and forgiveness, love and joy, preserved in the book, is forgotten, overwhelmed by the selfish interests of its leaders. Watching over his people, God resolves to send a special messenger to renew the spirit of compassion and freedom among the rulers of the world. Francis, who became attached to God as a young boy and never lost the beauty and joy of that friendship, is entrusted with the precious mission.
As Francis travels throughout the United States, Girzone brings to life the conflicts, hostility, and pain of our times and points the way toward peace and understanding. With humility and a strong sense of purpose, Francis teaches leaders to break through the crushing letter of the law and restore its spirit, to reunite groups torn apart by prejudice and hatred through love, and to show compassion to the less fortunate by welcoming them back home to the kingdom. Under the guidance of a new ruler well versed in the book, fear and skepticism give way to the sharing of ideas and the bringing together of people of different beliefs. And the miracle that begins in one part of the world soon spreads, touching the hearts and of transfiguring the lives of the people across the globe.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
When Girzone wrote Joshua back in the 1980s, many Christians embraced his fresh, folksy tale of a contemporary Jesus made accessible to the masses. Unfortunately, just as the motion picture Joshua is released in theaters this spring, we have this embarrassing, rambling diatribe against the institutional church that is thin in more ways than just the page count. Although the story is said to be that of "Francis," it appears to be a barely disguised autobiographical tale of Girzone's own life as a retired priest and international speaker and author. Francis, portrayed as a modern-day messenger from God, travels from one venue to another, addressing packed auditoriums and receiving standing ovations ("They were so proud that someone of Francis's standing would come and speak with them"). Girzone details the insults of those who don't agree with Francis's teachings, from the hosts who leave him to his own devices for supper to the narrative aside: "Because of his care for the people and his courage in speaking out, petty Vatican officials made sure he was deprived of honors offered to him by prestigious universities. But being a soul of greater stature than those who persecuted him, he was little offended by the slight." Girzone's characters are disappointingly one-dimensional: those who believe in Francis's message are good; those who disagree are wrong or unenlightened. The writing is uneven in quality and often didactic. This brief parable is not worthy of Girzone's well-established readership.