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447 pages, Kindle Edition
First published January 1, 1976
Theories that suggest the second block of material to be a gradual collection of early Church comments on the parable prove to be inadequate to the structural and theological nature of the material. The poem is the work of a skilled Palestinian poet in the first century. There remains no reason to doubt that the author was Jesus of Nazareth.
I'd previously read The Cross & the Prodigal, and while I enjoyed it very much, I didn't find it absolutely astounding. This book, however, was astounding. As I read Bailey's explanations of the cultural backgrounds and theological clusters surrounding each parable, I felt that I had never really understood anything about the parables before. These books are from the 1970s, around the time I was born. How, then, is it possible that I'm only just now finding Bailey, and really getting into the stories Jesus told? I don't know, but I'm glad I've now found this book.
Having grown up in the church and spent most of my life following Jesus, I reach points where I wonder what's left in the Bible that I haven't heard before, and sometimes I feel stagnant, wishing that I were more enthusiastic about the Bible. What Bailey has done in this volume is to reignite my excitement for the gospels. That's a beautiful gift that he's given to me and, I assume, many other readers.
The opening of Poet & Peasant reads like the literature review of a doctoral dissertation (which is not a compliment), but once I made it through that, the reading became quite engrossing. My favorite section of this volume was the first half of Through Peasant Eyes, which was probably the point at which I was tracking best with Bailey (and I think he is at his best in those first chapters).
I read this book straight through, in about a week and a half. If I read it again (and I believe I will), I would slow down and use one chapter a week as a focus for my own meditation on scripture. There is a lot of great content in each chapter, especially of Through Peasant Eyes, and reading it in one block was probably not the best way to spend time with it. I do look forward to rereading (and recommending) this book, as well as moving on to some of Bailey's other work.