Wednesday, November 6, 2019

In the Fiction Corner: The Last Man at the Inn


In the Fiction Corner with Lauren


I have often wondered how people in Biblical times who lived near the Savior and heard about him could be unbelievers. It seems so obvious to me that he is the Savior, and it’s easy to project that to others of the time period. However, R. William Bennett paints a beautiful picture of one man’s journey to becoming a believer.

Simon is a merchant who travels and sells goods to make his living. Throughout the book, as he goes from place to place, he hears stories of a man named Jesus. The teachings begin to hit a little closer to home for Simon, and he begins to wonder if this proclaimed Savior is the real deal. With stunning imagery, the author really brings to life what it would be like to be there for every step of the Saviors mission on earth.

I can whole-heartedly recommend this book if you are preparing for the Christmas season or would like to come closer to the Savior in your life. With some unexpected turns in Simon's story, I had tears in my eyes as I pictured the pain, heartache, joy and testimony building experiences that Simon experienced through his life. I feel as though the author truly knows the Savior, and with his writing he is helping others to do the same.

Get your copy here

Here's the back copy:

Bestselling author R. William Bennett imagines how a contemporary of Jesus, Simon, an ordinary spice merchant and a Jew without deeply felt religious beliefs, begins his lifelong journey as one of the first new Christians as his life intersects with Jesus at the major milestones of his life and ministry.

From the very beginning, Simon is on the scene on the eve of Jesus’ birth. He is the last man to get an available room at the inn in Bethlehem, forcing Joseph and Mary to be turned away upon their arrival. Later that night, unable to sleep, Simon stumbles upon a group huddled around a cave, solemnly watching the miracle of a newborn babe in a stone manger and immediately recognizes the couple from the inn. Gazing upon the scene, he feels something of spiritual significance: peaceful, holy, sacred. The next day, he hears rumors in the marketplace of a holy birth which is the fulfillment of an ancient prophecy: the promised Messiah of the Jewish people. Simon wonders if that was what he witnessed.

As readers, we walk with Simon as he witnesses Jesus’ revolutionary teachings like the Sermon on the Mount. Simon also hears testimonies of Jesus’ miracles, and watches his own eldest son embrace the new covenant after witnessing John baptize Jesus, an act which signals the beginning of Jesus' ministry, which paves the way for a new people of God.

Simon feels blessed to have his family, but he doesn’t understand why others are searching for deeper faith and connection to God. Still questioning and unsure, he spends his life determined to find out if Jesus truly is the son of God, the promised Messiah. Eventually, Simon travels to Jerusalem as the popularity of Jesus’ ministry catches the attention of those in power.

By the time he arrives in Jerusalem, he discovers that Jesus has been tried and convicted of treason in a Roman court and is sentenced to death by crucifixion. After a life of following Jesus from a distance, Simon is now walking the streets of Jerusalem with him. At a critical moment, Simon steps out from the crowd to help Jesus ease the burden of carrying the cross, symbolically pledging himself to ease the burden of humankind by spreading the word of Jesus as a new true Christian believer.

In the aftermath of Jesus’ death, Simon’s family thinks that the new ministry is now over. But it’s a true test of faith—believing in the certainty of what is unseen—and in a week’s time, Jesus’s followers encounter him risen from the dead. In this moment of Jesus' resurrection, Simon is ready. His faith, built steadily on the bedrock of Jesus’ teachings—love of God and love of one’s neighbor—moves him to dedicate himself to a new mission, declaring, “We have work to do.”

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