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Jesus
Christs Let
it be noted that the novel is novel in construction. Over a hundred vignettes
comprise the whole and vary in length from a few lines to a final reflection of
forty pages. Let it also be said that it is falling off your ass funny!
The Iceman is well familiar with that inelegant repose and so knows well
of what he speaks. There
is nothing hidden that will not be made manifest … pickup a piece of wood and
you will find me there … When you make the two one … then you will enter the
kingdom. In
the first four lines of text, he tells an old man that he has come to die for
his sins. The old man replies,
"then what am I to die for?" Here, at the book's inception, Langguth
suggests that not only do we die for our own sins but, like Christ crucified,
die for every other. Only in the tale of Tim Finnegan and his many-peopled Wake
does a beginning of such brevity possess such gravity and gait -- and Langguth
is funnier than Joyce. Have
I told you about the time that I stole the money?
Something came over me. Isn't
that the expression? In
another fragment, a murderous Prince declares to Christ, "We are one man
you and I." In
still a third, a man of corpulence and wealth, whom Jesus takes to be Satan,
responds when a disciple calls out Jesus' name. "And
all this time," the fat man said wheezing and wiping tears of laughter from
his eyes, "I thought you were the
Devil." Langguth
combines the spiritual subtlety of Borges with the comic ferocity of Joseph
Heller. Many of the stories are
familiar from the Gospels. It is as
if Groucho Marx penned a fifth to view aslant the celebrated four. "Will
we all be united once more in the mansions of heaven?
Will we find together the peace that has escaped us on earth?
Will we be ushered into the presence of God our Father?
… And all our doubts will be forgotten, and all our despair will be
forgotten, and death will never be able to touch us again." Jesus
looked to the bed where the eyes were open but the chest still. "She's
dead." "Will
the beauty of God's love fill our souls?"
Mary reached forward to lower the girl's eyelids.
"Will the joy of knowing God make all the misery our lives look
insignificant? Will God's glory at
last make each of us glorious?" She
was still talking when Jesus went out the door. One
of the most sacred texts in Mahayanna Buddhism is the Avatamsaka Sutra.
In it the pilgrim Sudhana seeks enlightenment at the feet of fifty-two
cosmic masters. He wants to become a
Bodhisattva -- one who possesses the insight of a Buddha but who remains among
men to assuage their suffering and assist their enlightenment. Sudhana
visits a group of prisoners, condemned for the notoriety of their crimes. He
wonders if there is any hope for this human refuge. "Oh yes," replies
his master. "These are the
Buddhas of the next incarnation. At
a similar juncture in Jesus Christs,
Jesus is in prison. His jailer is
tempted to take him on a tour of the facility. "We have a cell filled with
men who think they are Jesus Christ." Jesus replies, "They might be
right … I would not be surprised to meet myself here, and when you began to
speak so urgently to me, I wondered whether you were a Christ." At
the end of the Avatamsaka, Sudhana discovers that the men and women he desired
to assist have already arrived in Nirvana -- they are each Bodhisattvas
attempting to assist Sudhana to his goal. Compare
that sentiment with this passage from the work we're considering: We
think we do everything for others. But
it's only that the others know what is best for us. Langguth's
book is a blasphemy and a kick in the pants of those who believe there is only
one Christ and he belongs to them. Jesus
Christs was written to suggest the contrary.
If we fail to find Christ among our fellows and fail to find the features
of his face within each silvered mirror -- then crucifixion is the promised end. |