3/5 Stars 🌟
Considering all that I've seen Francine Rivers pull off, The Prince was not up to what the standard I'd come to expect.
The Prince is Biblical fiction of Jonathan, King Saul's own son. Another who I had not ever thought could have a fictional narrative, yet many times have wondered about. How did the son of a king end up friends - and such loyal friends at that - with the man who would take the crown?
I didn't know what kind of personality Francine Rivers would give Jonathan. I held high expectations after reading The Priest and The Warrior, and I expected to walk away with a new perspective of Jonathan and the time that King Saul ruled. Francine Rivers has opened my eyes to bible characters' humanity.
Francine Rivers starts the story from an unexpected time; Jonathan's youth. We are immediately pulled into a time that I forgot to consider. Things like Samuel's sons, the history of Israel's unfaithfulness in clearing the promise land, and their outcry for a king despite the warning from God.
Jonathan was actually in a similar situation to anyone who is trying to obey God and honour a parent who is wayward of the Law... Seeing his reaction and hearing Samuel's responses was actually really amazing. I read this at a time when God was teaching me how to respect authority as He is the one who gives authority to earthly parents, leaders, and church leaders. It is truly incredible to think of another in the bible who struggled like this, exactly when you have questions. I also love Jonathan's heart of service 😊:
" 'To hold the Law is a wondrous thing, Abba, but to copy it is a terrifying task.' "
When Jonathan said this, I felt a bunch of meanings just flow over me with a reverence for God's laws.
It was really hard to see King Saul, choosing men's praise over God over and over again. God gives him a command, and he hears it and fails to obey. It's easy to judge on this side, but we all do the same thing. It's such an uncomfortable story because anyone can be guilty of this. Except in Saul's case, his mistakes were kingdom size. Yet, God put him over Israel, knowing he'd do this. Meaning God was always in control, even when Saul acted in disobedience. Interesting.
When David enters, my goodness! Just that first line..."The Lord is my shepherd..." It soothed me immediately out of the fears I was sharing with Jonathan. It spoke to the direct opposite of what King Saul was living out, having been lost himself.
I felt scared for King Saul. Immense fear. I couldn't help it. God chose him. Who would he have been had he followed? The man he was before being King seemed better. It's horrific watching him be devoured by people pleasing, anger, desperation, and just seeing him stray so far from God. It eats at me. I'm saying it over and over because I could not stop thinking about it.
I also started to consider David in a new train of thought. David led a group of dangerous men. Men who killed people and were going against King Saul by following David. They had to have been all sorts of people. They had even tempted him to act against Saul. What kind of man can band together with men and inspire them to follow. I'm sure most had their own reasons to stick with David, maybe some selfish, some pure. I'm just amazed at David's self-control. By all means, I might have been influenced to act against the man who was hunting me unjustly. If anyone had encouraged it, I would definitely act on that. Yet, he did not. Reading the Psalms, I can see that he was anguished. He was scared and wished to be vindicated... Still, he would not touch God's anointed. It was so much easier to imagine him as perfect, but what a storm to have inside you! 😭
Although Jonathan is sometimes feeling a little too perfect. I related with him in his struggles, but he's always acting from such a pure place. It's hard to fault him anything 😅 It's amazing to see such faith. He's too good for me as the character who is driving this narrative. I needed more humanity in the form of something besides the battle of loyalty. Did I just miss it? Because even when he argued with his dad, he would do it respectfully and out of love. Which is quite accurate, too. I just wished that Francine Rivers expressed more of the things that made Jonathan's character more alive.
Someone once told me that if I find myself with a character who is not the victim of all the main action and conflict, that is not my main character. Personally, I think that is why Jonathan did not feel like a main character. So much of "his" story is witnessing the lives of others. In the rest of the Sons of Encouragement series, this is true of other characters, but they had things change them and grow them in a way which storytelling gives their stories necessary elements for climb and fall. Jonathan seems from beginning to end to know what is right, and he does that. Even his mistakes are pure hearted, bless him. It didn't make for very interesting reading, falling flat at many moments.
And I felt that his friendship with David didn't satisfy the bond of brotherhood. They did the things many close friends did-without much that was expressed through the writing-to support that depth. I needed more to cement that friendship. The way their friendship was written fell short without that.
There is much you can learn and have open your eyes in here, but this was not the best of Francine Rivers's writing.
I still love you, Francine Rivers! I'm going to continue this series, because the next two books are of people that I really haven't given any thought to. Silas and Amos.