| Author Interview Beautiful Outlaw: John Eldredge Reveals the Personality of JesusBy Hannah Goodwyn CBN.com Senior Producer
 CBN.com - Jesus Christ. What image comes to mind when you  think of that holy name? Is He a painted figure, the angelic-looking, bearded fellow  of Renaissance art? Is He a super spiritual storyteller? Is there more to this  man than even the devout realize? Bestselling author John Eldredge thinks so. He even offers  answers in Beautiful Outlaw, his new book about the  personality of Jesus.  Recently, the Wild at Heart author spoke with CBN.com about how  freeing it was to embrace Jesus’ personality and how it has deepened his faith and love  for Christ. Here are excerpts from that conversation.  While  writing Beautiful Outlaw, was there one revelation about the personality  of Jesus that surprised you? John  Eldredge: First off, that He has a personality. Right? We've  made elevator music of Jesus Christ. We've made Him the most boring, bland,  blah person; and He was the most revolutionary man.  The playfulness of Jesus [was surprising]. When you  pause and you think, “OK, God created laughter, and He gave us the capacity for  laughter.” But then you don't really see that when you read the Gospels; Jesus  seems like a very serious person. You know the phrase “Jesus laughed” isn't  ever used in the Gospels. So, most people walk away with the idea that Jesus is  a pretty serious guy, pretty sour faced most of the time, pretty upset at  what's going on around Him.  Then, we take the playfulness of creation and you  say, “Wait a second, God created laughter. Maybe Jesus is playful. Maybe we  just haven't found it in the Gospels.” And you read back through some of these  stories such as the Emmaus Road  or the miraculous catch of fish in John 21, and you go, “Oh, my goodness. Jesus  is a very playful person with a great sense of humor.” Beautiful Outlaw speaks to a three-dimensional  Jesus instead of the words-on-paper personality we hold  onto. How did you go about unravelling Jesus’ personality?  Eldredge: The first step for me was to remove the religious costume that the Church has  put on Jesus, the stain glass, the white robe and sandals, the super spiritual  Jesus. If you just take off the religious costume, you realize He was,  to begin with, a man. His humanity is real and you start looking for his  personality in these stories… his playfulness, his cunning, his disruptive  honesty. The more that you come to know Jesus for who He really is, loving Him  is not a problem. What’s  one revelation all believers should know about Jesus’ personality? Eldredge: That He is the least religious person you will ever meet. That's the irony.  That the man who hated religion most has become the most religious cartoon in  the history of the world. Our images of Him now are just draped in the hyper-spiritual  religious. Just the idea that Jesus is a person that you can know and relate to  as intimately as you love and relate to your closest friends. That's huge for  most people.  We're told that you can have a relationship with  Jesus, but most Christians don't experience Jesus personally like that. They  just don't. We honor Him. We respect Him. We worship Him. We don't experience  Him and His personality like we do the people we love the most in our lives.  And why is that? Some  may say, “That's fine and good for the time that He was on Earth, but when  He ascended it was a different story.” What would you say to that? Eldredge: Look at how He acts after His resurrection. He doesn't just  dash off to the Father and leave us here. He spends a good bit of time  still with his disciples. The way that He relates to them is so human, like  the miraculous catch of fish, John Chapter 21. It's the third time that the  disciples have seen Jesus after the resurrection. He does this marvelous thing  where He repeats the same story of how they met Him. The way that these guys  got pulled into being his disciples was the miraculous catch of fish on the  shores of the sea of Galilee. He does it again. Then, what does He do? He says,  “Come and have breakfast.” They have a cookout on the beach. Jesus does not  even show up in the temple after the resurrection. He doesn't show up in the  synagogue. He doesn't invite these guys to a Bible study. There's a realness to  Him. There's an earthiness. There's an authenticity to Him that we yearn to  experience. This is the resurrected Christ. This is post-redemption.  Then, you go to Revelation. This is now the  ascended Christ. This is a famous passage that most Christians have heard,  where He says, “Behold I stand at the door and knock. If anyone opens the door,  I will come in.” It's a letter written to Christians, which is kind of an  interesting thought. It's not an evangelistic passage. He's writing the  Christians, and He says, “Hey, you have left me standing in the street.” Jesus  is outside; we are inside. He's knocking, and the idea is if you open the door  to Him, He says, “I will come in and be intimate with you.” So the offer of  this intimacy with Jesus for who He really is still is available. He hasn't  changed.  In other words, Jesus Christ is the same yesterday,  today, and forever. The same man, the same personality that you meet in the  Gospels. He didn't suddenly become something else. Now, He’s the  hyper-spiritual, godlike figure in the Heavens? He is the same person. He acts  in the same ways. Does our walk suffer because we don’t fully understand Jesus? Eldredge: Oh, totally, totally. Absolutely. You will gravitate. A.W. Tosure says that the  most important thing that ever crosses your mind is what you believe about God.  I'm going to bring that into more focus and say, the most important thought you ever  think is what you think about Jesus. Because Jesus makes God very specific.  It is God with us, Emanuel. Jesus came to make God known. “This is what I'm  like. This is what the Father's like. If you've seen Me, you've seen the  Father. We're one in the same.”  So when you have a very religious Jesus, you end up  with very religious Christians. When you have a very bland Jesus, you  have very bland church. So the hyper-spiritualization of Jesus has done  incredible damage to our experience of Him, but also to our witness of Him in  the world. Because then you get these Christians who are two-dimensional,  bland, boring figures, and the world goes, “Who wants that?” Do  you think Christ says, “Man, these guys don't get me”, when he looks at us? Eldredge: He says that to Thomas. [Remember when] Thomas says to Jesus trying to explain,  “I'm about to leave, but it's going to be OK because I'm going to come back to  you and it's all going to be alright.” Thomas says to Him, “Alright, before you  go just show us the Father.” And Jesus looks at Him and goes, “Thomas, have I  been with you for so long and you don't know Me?” Of course, He says that to  us.  How  do we relearn who Christ is after years of thinking a certain way?
 Eldredge: The second half of Beautiful Outlaw is designed to help people come in  to encounters with Jesus. It's not enough to have factual information about Him,  how ever correct those facts maybe. We're meant to experience Him. I John 1  says, “I wrote this so you could experience Jesus the way we did." So let's  just first make it clear that the Christian life is meant to be this same kind  of experience of Jesus as the disciples had. You are meant to experience Jesus  as personally, intimately, regularly, as the disciples did.
 How do we get there? Step one is we begin to take down  the barriers that we have placed on experiencing Jesus. Stuff like, “Well, He  doesn't act like that anymore.” That's a barrier. If we hold to that about  Jesus, it has to be really hard to experience Him. He's the same yesterday,  today, and forever. So, opening ourselves up to the possibility that He does  speak to you, that He does want to be playful with you, that He does want to be  disruptive, that He does want to be all the things, that He is fierce, and kind,  and winsome, and beautiful with you, just to open up the possibility of that is  extraordinary for most people. What  is the role the Holy Spirit plays in understanding Jesus? Eldredge: He makes it real. He gives us the ability to relate to the Father and the Son. Beautiful Outlaw  says that understanding Jesus' personality clears up confusion about passages the Church has debated for years. Can you give an example? Eldredge: Reading the Gospels without the personality of Jesus is like watching  television with the sound turned off. That's why so many of these passages seem  so bizarre to us.  Like the Syrophoenician woman who comes to Him and  says, “My daughter is possessed. Please help me.” Jesus says, “Sorry you're not suppose  to give the food of the children to the dogs.” You read that story and you go,  “Yikes!” He's calling her a dog. “You worthless scumbag. I don't have time for  you.” But if you watch the interchange in the story, and you watch how Jesus  responds to her, “You have amazing faith; you're daughter will be well.” So the  story ends with Him with a smile on His face. We know that He is not racist. We  know that He is not misogynistic. So what in the world is going on with that  story? Well, if you insert the playfulness of Jesus, and you see it as a  repartee between the two, she has a cunning reply. He smiles, and He says,  “Well answered. Well answered.” Well, then you get this incredible encounter.  Same thing with the woman at the well. Same thing  with the rich, young ruler. These stories that have troubled us in the past, if  you recover the actual personality of Jesus in those stories and bring His  heart into those stories, they take on a whole new meaning. They answer some  pretty troubling questions for us. What  reactions have you gotten from readers about Beautiful Outlaw?  Eldredge: One of my favorite was when I gave it to a friend of mine. He was on a long-distance flight, and he texted me, and he says “I think that the woman next to  me thought that I was losing my mind.” He said, “I wept the entire flight. I  have fallen in love with Jesus again.” This guy is a pastor and a really good  man and knows a lot about God, but to say, “I've fallen in love with Jesus  again.” I mean that's everything. That makes it worth the whole thing. 
  Hannah   Goodwyn serves as   the Family and Entertainment producer for CBN.com. For more articles and information, visit Hannah's bio page.
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