1. Terry Palmer says:

    Thanks for this blog.  Sort of gets me going not just for easter but in my writing.  I like your goals as stated above, to explore and enjoy epic stories that reflect the truths and beauties of the first and greatest Epic Story, God’s Word.  Thank you for making that stand for Christ.  So much of what I see at Wal Mart is horrid or torrid.  Three of my fellow workers are into vampire games, role play, etc.  So much darkness in our world.  Makes me wonder how many writers are interested in writing about His Light over darkness in order to compete in the market place against that which is evil?  That is my goal.  Thanks for Speculative Faith.  Terry Palmer

  2. Good stuff, Stephen. I’m glad to see you bringing up this subject and look forward to reading the rest!

  3. Lex Keating says:

    I have to say, my all-time favorite story of resurrection is Stephen Lawhead’s Song of Albion trilogy. Our hero dies and is resurrected not once, but twice (thrice, if you want to get metaphysical about the climax of the first book)–and the scope of salvation gets bigger every time it happens. Makes me wonder who I’m dying to save… 🙂 

  4. I would argue that Gandalf in The Lord of the Rings really is resurrection, not mere “resuscitation”; he’s “sent back” changed from what he was before (“Indeed I am Saruman, one might almost say, Saruman as he should have been … I have passed through fire and deep water, since we parted. I have forgotten much that I thought I knew, and learned again much that I had forgotten. I can see many things far off, but many things that are close at hand I cannot see.”), and he goes to the Grey Havens (or, rather, thence to Valinor) because his job was to be the Enemy of Sauron and Sauron is finally gone forever, rather than because he would otherwise eventually die. (After all, true death is “the gift of Men,” rather than “the gift of those-other-than-elves.”)

    Even Jesus, when raising Lazarus and parents’ children back from death, did not resurrect them.

    Mmm … In any case, there’s a fascinating science fiction story (A Canticle for Leibowitz—which I haven’t read, but my dad’s told me quite a bit about) that includes him as a (minor) character in an after-the-atomic-wars setting, positing (since “it is given to man to die once …”) that, having been resurrected, he can’t die again.
    Turning away from fiction: While the complete renewal and resurrection of human beings and the creation is something we won’t see in its final form until the end, and so is indeed something to be looked forward to with eager anticipation, it’s not at all clear that “the renewal of all things” is limited to the eschaton, rather than a gradual working-out of the Resurrection in the world through Christ’s body the Church.
    Also, somewhat trivially:

    Does it ever seem to you like Christians emphasize Good Friday over Resurrection Sunday?

    In the circles in which I now move the most, it’s all muddled up together, with Good Friday as part of “the Easter season” (like Advent is part of “the Christmas season”), making me long for the church I attended in college where each was given its proper weight but in its proper place—and, even better, every Sunday was celebrated to some extent (but explicitly so) as a “mini-Easter.”

    • Resuscitation. That was the word I had been seeking. In fact, I’ll make the corrections above, thanks to your comment, Jonathan.

      it’s not at all clear that “the renewal of all things” is limited to the eschaton, rather than a gradual working-out of the Resurrection in the world through Christ’s body the Church

      That’s what I hope to explore especially in part 3, which will discuss the fact that Christ’s people have already died and been raised spiritually with Him — we now only await our physical death-and-resurrection, along with that of the creation itself.

      Resurrection is split right down the middle, perhaps as described by that slightly famous doctrine-wonky phrase “already and not yet.”

      • Resurrection is split right down the middle, perhaps as described by that slightly famous doctrine-wonky phrase “already and not yet.”

        Precisely. (I usually see that phrase with some punctuation mark—a dash, a semicolon, or a slash—instead of “and,” though.) Or, like the church I now attend likes to describe sanctification, “we have been raised with Christ, we are being raised, we shall be raised,” and “creation has been renewed, creation is being renewed, creation will be renewed.”
        I’d thought you had used the word “resuscitation” at least once in the post originally, since I remember scrolling back and forth at least once to see what word you’d used, but perhaps the result of that vanished in a revision.

      • The original word I used was revitalize. I’m not sure why I originally thought of that instead of resuscitate.

  5. Galadriel says:

    This post actually led me to go back to the Speculative Death discussion from about a year ago and see what we were saying there…

What do you think?