St. Peter walks into a communist vegan restaurant in San
Francisco and orders smoked salmon.
The hippie at the counter rolls her eyes and says, “we’re vegan. No salmon.” Of course St. Peter is
incensed and ready to start brawling: “isn’t this the Pacific northwest? How do you not have salmon?” And just before he lets fly his fists
of fury, he looks over and spots Jesus sitting next to Matt Mikalatos. St.
Peter’s brow darkens a little farther, and he strides over to confront them.
Yep that’s the opening scenario of Matt Mikalatos’ My Imaginary
Jesus. It turns out that
Matt’s Jesus was an imaginary Jesus, and with the help of St. Peter, a talking
donkey, an ex-prostitute, some Mormon missionaries, and an atheist, Matt goes
on a quest to confront his imaginary Jesuses (yes there are many), so he can
find the real one.
The book was a lot of fun, though I don’t think I’ve been
around or cared about church culture enough to get all the jokes. However the point of the book, namely
that a lot of the general ideas about Jesus you hear in Sunday School or are
taught in seminaries these days are imaginations and interpretations of a real
person, is spot on.
It’s the real Jesus that we should be seeking relationship
with, not the myths we’ve made up over the years. He’s alive and speaking, and we can know Him personally.
I highly recommend this book. It will entertain you certainly, but more importantly it
will leave you hungry to know the real Jesus and maybe even help you start rooting
out the imaginary Jesuses in your life.
I received a copy of this book from the publisher for
review. All opinions are my own.
3 comments:
Hey Stephen -- thanks for the great review. I'm glad you enjoyed My Imaginary Jesus!
Thanks Matt! Keep up the great writing! By the by, I have some Campus Crusade friends that really enjoyed your talks at The Big Break this year. Thank you for your service to our Lord!
God bless!
Oh man, my pleasure. I love coming to Big Break.
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