Born-again Stories

Looking for Jesus
by Virginia Stem Owens, Westminster John Knox; 261 pp.; $18

Virginia Stem Owens doesn’t deny that Jesus today can be known immediately, personally, and even miraculously. But in her experience, when it happens, it is the result of his initiative, not her effort: “However much I want to transport myself to his celestial habitat, I do not believe I can, at will, reach through time to lay hold of that ethereal figure. He lives now on the far side of these earthbound stories and comes and goes as he will.”

Yet it is in these earthbound stories from the Gospels that she finds solace. In them she discovers herself and even more: words “which contain life itself.” “This is the place,” she writes, “where I can indeed count on finding Jesus.”

In this book, she rehearses 23 Jesus stories “to illuminate and clarify the gospel narratives, while also making them permeable enough for entry”—meaning she refuses to find a simplistic “lesson” for readers today, but instead tries to let the power of the story work on each of us in its own complex way. It’s not just her attention to the more salient revelations of biblical scholarship but her narrative freedom that helps us re-engage these old, old stories. The porticoes at the Bethzatha Pool had, she says, “turned into something like a perpetual waiting room at a doctor’s office.” The Samaritan woman reacts to Jesus with “Great, the guy’s a religious nut, too”; then, after giving “a skeptical snort,” says, “Okay, Mr. Jew, just where do you expect to get this Wonder Water?”

With her usual gentle and probing style, Owens reminds us that Jesus is bigger than any of our favorite constructions (Jesus the Revolutionary or Jesus the Republican or Jesus the Whatever). Better still, she puts us there with Jesus, with the people he met, because, as she says, “only by entering his story can we hope to meet Jesus.”

Copyright © 1999 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Also in this issue

Gambling Away the Golden Years: Casinos are seducing an alarming number of seniors. Where is the church?

Cover Story

Gambling Away the Golden Years

Exotic Dancers Find Escape Route

The Church's Mr. Manners

Does Kosovo Pass the Just-War Test?

Dental Miracle Reports Draw Criticism

Tattoos No Longer Taboo?

Two Held in O'Hair Case

Nation's Last Leprosarium Closes

Food Banks Face Shortfalls

Celebration of Traditions

In Brief: May 24, 1999

Expatriate Congregations Thrive

Multinational Focus Spurs Church Growth

Global Death Rates May Skyrocket

Missionaries or Mercenaries?

In Brief: May 24, 1999

Ancient Church Discovered in Gaza

Materialism, Heresy Plague Churches

Exit Strategy

Letters

Firebombs Threaten Messianic Jews

Biotech: Pro-lifers Resist Embryo Research

Disney Ditches Dogma

Firebombs Bolster Prayers Among Messianic Believers

Editorial

Church Discipline on Trial

Editorial

Compassion Doesn’t Choose Sides

No Luck With the Churches

Surprised by Death

How Abortion Became a Necessary Evil

Re-Imagining Women

Is Lying Always Wrong?

Men Need Church, Too

Classic & Contemporary Excerpts from May 24, 1999

Where No Ministry Has Gone Before

The Art of Being Christian

View issue

Our Latest

High Time for an Honest Conversation about THC

Legal cannabis may be here to stay, but the Christian conversation is just getting started.

The National Guard Debate Needs a Dose of Honesty

Criticizing federal overreach while remaining silent about local failures does not serve the cause of justice.

News

Saudi Arabian Prison Frees Kenyan After ‘Blood Money’ Payout

A Christian mother relied on the Muslim practice of “diyat” to bring her son home alive.

Why Fans Trust Forrest Frank

The enormously popular Christian artist says he experienced miraculous healing. His parasocial friends say “amen.”

How a Missionary Family in Lebanon Produced an American Hero

Bill Eddy’s Arabic acumen served US interests and forged Middle East ties.

Eight Divine Names in One Glorious Passage

Hebrew terms for God appear across the Old Testament. The prophet Isaiah brings them all together.

The Bulletin

Venezuelan Boat Attack, Payday Loans, and USAID Fire Sale

The Bulletin discusses the attack on an alleged Venezuelan drug boat, predatory lending, and the destruction of items from cancelled USAID projects.

Why an Early American Missionary Family Was Beloved in Lebanon

Over five decades of multigenerational ministry, the Eddys pioneered health and educational outreach.

Apple PodcastsDown ArrowDown ArrowDown Arrowarrow_left_altLeft ArrowLeft ArrowRight ArrowRight ArrowRight Arrowarrow_up_altUp ArrowUp ArrowAvailable at Amazoncaret-downCloseCloseEmailEmailExpandExpandExternalExternalFacebookfacebook-squareGiftGiftGooglegoogleGoogle KeephamburgerInstagraminstagram-squareLinkLinklinkedin-squareListenListenListenChristianity TodayCT Creative Studio Logologo_orgMegaphoneMenuMenupausePinterestPlayPlayPocketPodcastRSSRSSSaveSaveSaveSearchSearchsearchSpotifyStitcherTelegramTable of ContentsTable of Contentstwitter-squareWhatsAppXYouTubeYouTube