A cartoon in the I...
Illustration
A cartoon in the New Yorker some years ago shows two young women returning to their apartment from their day's work. Both are trying to relax and make the most of their leisure; yet both look, and are, thoroughly bored. One says to the other, "I don't know whether to take a Benzedrine and go to the party, or a Nembutal and go to bed."
On the day of Jesus' death, the disciples' lives had become bleak and desolate also. Surrealist Salvador Dali, in his painting of the Last Supper, shows the disciples with their heads bowed low over the table. Their long hair has fallen over the faces of most of them. And although one cannot see their faces, their hunched shou-lders and bowed heads portray vividly the anguish of their hearts. To those distressed, grief-stricken men, Jesus offered not a Benzedrine or a Nembutal, but the promise of Holy Spirit, God-in-Action in human life.
-- Keller
On the day of Jesus' death, the disciples' lives had become bleak and desolate also. Surrealist Salvador Dali, in his painting of the Last Supper, shows the disciples with their heads bowed low over the table. Their long hair has fallen over the faces of most of them. And although one cannot see their faces, their hunched shou-lders and bowed heads portray vividly the anguish of their hearts. To those distressed, grief-stricken men, Jesus offered not a Benzedrine or a Nembutal, but the promise of Holy Spirit, God-in-Action in human life.
-- Keller
