Have you ever wanted to have dinner with Jesus? I know I have! Dinner ... lunch ... breakfast ... a glass of water ... just a chance to talk—I’d settle for that.
The premise of David Gregory’s book, Dinner with a Perfect Stranger: An Invitation worth considering, is that the main character Nick Cominsky receives an invitation to a dinner with Jesus. I’ve read the arguments pro and con for this book and this review isn’t praise or scorn for the writing, because that is the means to the end, or the tabletop. Anyone who complains about the surface on which his/her food is served isn’t very hungry. A table needs to be clean and well-presented; anything beyond that is superfluous. But we all know that there is great deal more to food than it being clean and well-presented. It needs to meet nutritional requirements, be balanced, well-prepared and sufficient. In this book, the table is just fine, however, it is the food—the substance which matters—and it is very fine.
Gregory’s purpose in writing DwaPS is to give us a fantasy—actually THE fantasy, well anyway, those of us who fantasize and dream of our encounter with the Divine. Although that should be all of us, the reality of course is it isn’t. If Jesus—God—is a real person to you, at some point in your life, you have wondered what it will be like to meet Him. DwaPS gives you the opportunity to experience that longing in one potential encounter, the difference being the main character, Nick, doesn’t believe in who He is talking to. What this book will be like for each individual reader will have to be as different as his/her relationship—or lack thereof—with the Almighty and to a certain extent with individual expectations and how tightly we hold them. Will we allow God to surprise and woo us with a Love more perfect than we can ever imagine or would we rather hold on to our own ideas?
Speaking for myself I was totally present at that dinner, except I didn’t have Nick’s skepticism. I drank in Jesus’ every word, answer, and gesture. I wasn’t Cinderella at the ball obviously, but I was having the time of my life and wanting the night to go on forever. Jesus was my Prince Charming and everything I hoped He would be. He was—is—Perfect, but in my case, He wasn’t a stranger, although He is mysterious and elusive.
Nick asked the questions, which probably made for a more interesting book. I kept having flashbacks to disastrous dates when I was a tongue-tied shy teen on a first date. I could see myself just staring at Jesus … with my mouth hanging open!
Sorry for the mixed metaphors, but when we are talking about God, we do grasp for something familiar to help our audience understand what we mean … all the while knowing we are falling way short of the Truth.
Well worth reading!
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Deacon Norm from our parish said he received this as a Christmas gift. As he described it in RCIA class last week I was so excited to read it. I LOVE the play on words in the title ... of course you know who the 'perfect' stranger is, right? ☺