We
don’t know much about Jesus’ childhood. For the most part, the Bible is silent
regarding these years. We do know that
Joseph took his family to Egypt following Jesus’ birth in order to protect the
child from King Herod’s paranoid wrath.
After their departure from Bethlehem, Herod’s soldiers attacked the
small village slaughtering all the male children under the age of two. The
event was consistent with Herod’s brutal rule. We can only imagine the grief
and sorrow suffered by the Bethlehemites.
Joseph
made a home for the family in Egypt and waited.
When Herod died, Joseph and Mary returned with their young family to
their home in Nazareth. Matthew points
out that this was a fulfillment of the Messianic prophecy, “Out of Egypt I
called My Son.” (Matthew 2:15).
Anne
Rice wrote a book that was later made into a movie based on this time in Jesus’
life, Christ the Lord, Out of Egypt. The book and the movie try to imagine what
Jesus would have been like as a child, how He and His family would have
wrestled with the growing awareness of His identity. The Bible only tells us that “He grew in
wisdom and stature and in favor with God and man.”
Almost
as interesting as the movie’s plot is the journey of the author who wrote the
book upon which it is based. Anne Rice
grew to fame writing the Vampire Chronicles while professing to be an atheist. She
shocked the secular world when, in 2002, she announced
she was done with vampires. After thirty-eight years as a professed atheist,
she said she had found faith in Christ and returned to the Catholic Church.
Eight years later, she rocked the Christian world by proclaiming
she was renouncing Christianity. She stated, "For those who care, and I
understand if you don’t: Today I quit being a Christian. I’m out. I remain
committed to Christ as always but not to being “Christian” or to being part of
Christianity.” She went on to say, “My faith in Christ is central to my life.
My conversion from a pessimistic atheist lost in a world I didn't understand,
to an optimistic believer in a universe created and sustained by a loving God
is crucial to me.” Rice died December
11, 2021 at the age of 80.
Anne represents many who continue to believe in Christ but have
left organized Christian churches. George Barna,
the leading researcher on faith in America, reported in 2008 that “a majority
of adults now believe that there are various biblically legitimate alternatives
to participation in a conventional church.” It appears that there is a growing
number of people who claim faith in Jesus but want little or nothing to do with
the institutional church.
Worldwide, we are witnessing the largest growth
in the number of Jesus followers in history. The number of believers in Africa grew
from 9 million to 360 million in the last century. More Muslims have come to
faith in Christ in the last two decades than at any other time in history. Churches, what they look like and how they
function, are changing while the number of Jesus followers is growing.
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