In the original stage version...
Illustration
In the original stage version of "Godspell," the Gospel spirit of love is beautifully conveyed. It brings to the stage the same movement that carries you along as you read the Gospels: love in the announcement of what God has done through Jesus Christ; love in the liveliness of the parables that elaborate on this Good News; love in the father whose lost son came home; love in the shepherd who found the lost sheep, and on and on. In the first act of "Godspell" you are swept along by this mood. The second act begins the same way, but soon it gets heavier as the opposition unites against Jesus and death draws near: the Crucifixion; the death. But "Godspell" doesn't end there as "Jesus Christ Superstar" did. In "Superstar" there is no hint of Resurrection. "Godspell" ends with the disciples carrying Jesus' body on their shoulders right down the center aisle of the theater. And as they go out they are singing the victory song, "Long Live God ... Long Live God." God, not death, has the last word and, as Children of God, we are promised to be "like him" and, therefore, "raised like him." LONG LIVE GOD.
