The Last Testament: A Memoir (36 page)

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Authors: God,David Javerbaum

Tags: #General, #Humor, #Literary Criticism, #Religion, #American, #Topic

BOOK: The Last Testament: A Memoir
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27
But watching thee work thy magic down there, I realized it would be unfair to the world to limit thy message, and goodness, and redemption, solely to the Jews.
28
They are my Chosen People; but thou deservest a Chosen People of thine own.
29
I guess what I am asking thee, son, is:
30
How does ‘Jesusism’ sound to thee?”

CHAPTER 22

1
A
nd the rest, as they say, is theology.
2 Jesus rose from the dead and made twelve public appearances; as with the miracles, we sought to strike a balance; enough to serve as verification, but not enough where one might say, “Oh great, the dead guy’s doing another show.”
3
He appeared to Mary Magdalene; he appeared to the apostles; he appeared to 500 believers at once; he even appeared to two lesser disciples on the road to Emmaus.
4
He passed the day with them unrecognized, lecturing them on the Prophets; then he revealed himself to them when they broke bread, only to disappear.
5
That was the only time I ever saw Jesus deliberately fuck with people.
6
He made sure to manifest himself to each of his longtime supporters at least once, that he might thank them for putting so much time and effort into his campaign.
7
Then he ascended to heaven, to sit, as it says, “at the right hand of God”; this is true; Jesus does sit at my right hand; as it happens I am a lefty, but it is still the seat of honor.
8
And today, 2,000 years, 500,000 martyrs, 824,000 cathedrals and 723 billion mortal sins later, Christianity—for H. G. did not like “Jesusism”; he felt the three esses would antagonize lispers—is the most successful religion of all time.
9
It hath over two billion adherents: more than Judaism, Sikhism, Jainism, Choctaw mythology, Siberian shamanism, and anthroposophy
combined.
10
Jesus continues dying for humanity’s sins every single day, and I have never heard him complain; not a single time.
11
The most I’ve ever heard him admit is that there are some people for whom it is a pleasure to die on the cross, and others for whom it feels like more work.
12
As for the two of us, we have had our squabbles over the centuries, as any father and son will;
13
Yet such disagreements inevitably end in a reconciliatory “come to Jesus” moment.
14
Our relationship these days is of a far different character than it once was.
15
A few days ago he and I were in my office discussing a finer theological point; the nature of which hath no bearing on thee, unless thou art an unbaptized baby.
16
He argued one way; I the other; he gave the Look; I conceded.
17
This took place a dozen times, in full view of Gabriel; and when the meeting was over Gabriel chuckled to himself; and though I had it within me to know why, I asked him, to save time.
18
“Heavenly Father,” he said, “there was a time when thou doubtedst thy son would ever amount to anything outside the world; believing him soft, and weak, and unable to impose his will.
19
Yet to see thy dealings with him now, it seems to me that this is the opposite of the truth; for I would describe thee, my L
ORD
, as nothing short of Jesus-whipped.”
20
I, too, chuckled; for Gabriel was right.
21
The Romans may have whipped Jesus, but in the end it was they, and I, and all of western civilization, who ended up
22
Jesus-whipped.

FILLEMIN

(“Godlibs”)

CHAPTER 1

1
A
sk Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, and now me: the creation of a Gospel is a grueling task.
2
To paraphrase Thomas Edison, scripture is 1 percent divine inspiration, 99 percent divine perspiration.
3
But some of thee may doubt this; some of my more skeptical readers may think writing a holy book is easy, that any old hack can crank out a Testament, or whip up a Koran during an all-nighter;
4
That all it requireth is a few crazy stories, a reverent tone, and a bunch of old-timey pronouns and verb endings.
5
Prepare to eat thy words, any old hack(s).
6
On the next pages are printed a few passages and excerpts from Scripture, with certain key words and phrases omitted, for thee to complete in accordance with the instructions written underneath the line.
7
(I call them “Godlibs”; I thought of that myself; but a Google search revealeth over 5,000 matching results.
8
Thanks, Google, thou pun-hoarding, mirth-killing parade-pisser.)
9
I have filled the first one out by way of example; the other three I leave to the reader’s sanctimonious imagination.
10
There are millions of ways to fill in these blanks, but I am confident not one of them will improve upon the poetry or profundity of the original.
11
However, in the interest of promoting creativity and sales, but mostly sales, I will be sponsoring a contest to determine the winner.
12
Once thou hast filled in the three selections, tear them out and place them in an envelope addressed to: Godlibs Contest, c/o God, 1600 Holy Avenue, Heaven.
13
I have no ZIP code, but that matters not; for the next step is to wrap the envelope in a ring of ram fat and burn it on an altar.
14
I will then reconstitute the submissions and judge each one based on originality, legibility, and savoriness.
15
One grand-prize winner will receive an autographed copy of this book; eternal admittance to the Kingdom of Heaven; and a $50 gift certificate to Boston Market.
16
Two runner-up winners will receive their choice of one of the above.
17
Enter, skeptics; it is not often the L
ORD
encourages thee to burn one of his books.

PLEADER

(“On Prayer”)

CHAPTER 1

1
I magine being in fourth grade; the bell for homeroom rings, thou takest thy seat, and suddenly a deafening voice booms from the PA system:
2
“Good morning, students. I am the L
ORD
thy God, King of the Universe. Here are the announcements.
3
Starting today, I will no longer be accepting any prayers addressed to me from this public school.
4
The Supreme Court hath ruled such prayers violate the First Amendment’s establishment clause; and their ruling applies to not only thee, but me.
5
Please refrain from addressing or thinking of me at any time while on school grounds.

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