This is the sequel to Father Elijah, an Apocalypse, which was a spiritual/political thriller. In that book, Father Elijah was asked by the Pope to confront the President of the European Union and urge him to repent. He failed in that mission, but it’s the attempt that was important.
Elijah in Jerusalem takes up where the previous book ended, with now Bishop Elijah and his friend Brother Enoch walking into Jerusalem. Elijah, wanted for a murder he didn’t commit, is attempting to renew the mission given him by the Holy Father, to call the most powerful and admired man on earth to repentance. He is the Man of Sin, on track to become president of the coming World Government, and appears to some to be the Antichrist. This is the story of Elijah’s attempt to do the will of God, his struggles with his own fears and doubts, and the people he meets in his journey.
It is not as exciting or suspenseful as Father Elijah, and not nearly as long, but it says all that needs to be said. As the author says in the Preface, it is not meant to be an accurate prediction of coming events, of how the end times will play out. Instead its primary mission is to awaken the reader’s imagination, to recall him to basic principles of life in Christ. In the trials and events and people Elijah meets, he like other messengers, is “a living word, a sign of contradiction and of consolation.”
Meditative and beautifully written, full of darkness, evil, grief and also hope and courage and perseverance, it is a book that will be treasured by anyone wishing to draw closer to the spirit of Christ.