The Zealots
₱907.00
Product Description
When fast friends take different paths, their lives are changed forever.
…Political angst of Roman rule has never been more harrowing than in first-century Judea.
“No man knows what is in his friend’s heart.” Talmud, Pesachim
One murderous event after another causes Shim’on to join a radical movement. Shim’on craves peace, but can he find peace living in the Zealot caves? Can vengeance satiate his demons?
Meanwhile, his idealistic friend is taken into the underbelly of the Holy City of Jerusalem.
This is the stuff of legends, myths & fables entertaining readers of Ben Hur, The Silver Chalice, Two from Galilee, The Robe, A Man Called Peter, and The Mark of the Lion. A classic survival story. Here is another epic tale of insurrection and free thought paralleling these first-century novels.
Here, we find a new illustrated brightness from the beginnings of the Christian faith.
GET THIS.
Review
“G.K. Johnson recreates a remarkable story of Christ’s passion from the landscape of Roman rule and the Zealot’s diminishing returns where vicious crucifixions and one man’s reason take the world by storm” – Karl Wheeler, high school teacher
Johnson’s debut novel is a beautifully imagined re-telling of some of Christianity’s most beloved stories from the viewpoints of two friends. Friends Shim’on and Yeshua are two young men in their mid-teens in Capernaum, a small village on the Sea of Galilee. Yeshua’s father is a rabbi and craftsman while Shim’on is the son of a fisherman. When Shim’on’s father is killed by the Romans occupying the region, the boys’ paths diverge as one seeks vengeance while the other seeks righteousness. As the story progresses, their experiences run the gamut from the chance to study in Jerusalem to interactions with the Zealots, a Jewish resistance movement opposed to the Roman occupation of Judea. The tales of both young men run a parallel track to that of Jesus, the rising Mashiach, or Messiah.
The intricately woven storylines flow at a wonderful pace, as readers are swept along on a tide of lovingly rendered details – from the wonder of Yeshua’s arrival in the Holy City to Shim’on’s time out on the open water. Johnson imbues cornerstone tales of Christianity’s origins with a fresh view through the eyes of fictional people, demonstrating a deep respect and love for both the ancient Jewish traditions and the new religion that grew out of them. Shim’on and Yeshua’s eventful lives are presented with little fanfare, but instead an enticing blend of action and introspection.
While aimed at young adults, the novel’s violence and attentiveness to the rigors of spiritual journey may push it toward the higher end of that age range, especially when coupled with some unfamiliar terms that are not immediately explained. The glossary at the end proves helpful but could have found more use at the novel’s beginning. The prose otherwise is invitingly easy to read.
Takeaway: A deeply respectful take on the origins of Christianity through the eyes of two young men and their coming of age.
Great for fans of: Lynn Austin’s The Restoration Chronicles, Ken Gire’s The Centurion.
Production grades
Design and typography: A
About the Author
Traveler and lover of culture and places. Avid reader since elementary school. Debut novel.