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This topic figured big into my literature worldview class in high school.
There is only one story worth telling, and that is the one given to us by the Lord. Everything we make can only be in the image of the Bible, or in perversion of the Bible. In the same way, Jesus will always be a model for a character somewhere or another. Because of that, most main characters (and several secondary or side characters) fit into one of seven "Jesus" roles.
The Man Himself---The Son of God, as He appears in the gospels. (The Passion of the Christ) The Type of Christ---A character who goes through a death (possibly symbolic) or rite of passage to save their people and point the way to Jesus. (Jonah, Aslan, Frodo, Aragorn) The Anti-Jesus---A character so evil that their dark parallel of Jesus pushes us toward the real thing. (Dracula) The Freedom Bringer---A character given Christ-like symbolism to emphasize the freedom he brings to his people. (Braveheart) The Message Bringer---A character that uses Christ-like symbolism to bring a new message to the people of their time. (Luke Skywalker) The Scarecrow Messiah---A Jesus, usually in person, specifically designed to disprove or mock the real thing. The Mask of Jesus---A character with Jesus symbolism who passes the mantel on to the "next savior". (Superman Returns, The Mask of Zorro)
The first three are characters that will point toward the Lord in their representation. The fourth can go one way or another, but the last three are all designed to discredit the Bible and the true Son of God, and either make Him look laughable, or to superimpose the writer's own worldview onto God Himself.
The fact of the matter is that we can't avoid using Jesus type characters. They're going to show up whether or not we mean to put them there. Just about every story can be found to have one of the above types. Any type can be written well or poorly.
I think the secret to writing a "Man Himself" without it becoming cheesy or heretical is the same way as writing your best friend into your story. You have to be spending more time with Him, in His Word and in prayer, than you do with your plots, music, and stories and books. Even a well-written type of Christ isn't Jesus Himself, and can be something that the enemy uses to distract you from time with the Lord.
The nice thing is, when you really spend time with Him, you don't have to worry about how to write well---you don't have to worry about whether you write at all---because He'll give you what you need to draw closer to Him and to point others in the same direction, in the way He desires, rather than the way we do.
_________________ You can't spell grin without ̶gRIN Words are my ̶bread and ̶butter. http://unshakablegirl.com/ http://www.ravelry.com/designers/kitra-skene
Haud Retene Haud Reverte
All resemblance to persons, people, friends, relatives, quotes, cultures, artificial intelligences, inside jokes, pets, unclaimed personalities, sentient objects, extra-terrestrials, inter-terrestrials, and draperies living, dead, undead, or comatose in any of my work are purely coincidental, incidental, circumstantial, inadvertent, unplanned, unforeseen, and unintentional. There's seriously no way I was referring to you. Honest.
The story so far: Birthright: Eleventh chapter pending. 28280 words. Heritage: First chapter drafted. Legacy: Character and plot development stage. Get a feel for the land. Visit Lor-Amar today!
Other novels on the brain: Quicksilver Shen'oh Story Crusoe's Star War Blazer Seven Arts Story The Queen's Knave Polarians Exile Realms All Librarians Are Secret Agents
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