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The
Conversation:
An
Intimate Journal of the Emmaus Encounter

The Conversation: An Intimate Journal of the Emmaus
Encounter by Judy Salisbury
Reviewed by Lisa J. Lickel
"Fiction—sure,
but…compelling and poignant and real."
This little book packs a ton of great information in
a compact, wholly readable and memorable script. In
eight chapters, plus a Preface, Final Reflections
and Endnotes, Judy Salisbury turns years of research
into a lovingly drawn proof text of the case for
Christ, of which I believe even the Apostle Paul
would have been proud.
Salisbury has taken the nature of Luke 24:13-35, the
conversation amongst an unnamed disciple and one
named Cleopas and a mysterious stranger while they
walked home to Emmaus from Jerusalem after the tidal
events surrounding the crucifixion and resurrection
of the Christ.
The author becomes the “I” character of the unnamed
disciple, and leaves the friend, Cleopas, as the
skeptic. Faithful to scripture, these two friends
are analyzing their recent experience when a
stranger joins them, and curiously, enjoins the
conversation as both an innocent and an expert.
Using the type of scholarly, intellectual text
proofs of Jewish thought, Salisbury carefully and
lovingly imagines this discussion and the scripture
that would be have drawn upon to show both Cleopas
and the unnamed talmid (scholar) how this Jesus who
died truly was the Messiah. Through the chapters
which explain Jesus’s Kingship and authority,
Rejection, how he suffered, and why he suffered, all
the way to the necessity and reality of the
resurrection, the author pulls together the Old
Testament texts to support the Christ.
Salisbury admits that the research was emotional and
tedious, but rewarding. Although the book is short,
just about ninety pages and easily readable in less
than an hour, Bible students and those who need a
good gift book for acquaintances who question
Christianity will appreciate having these scriptures
in one conversation.
Fiction—sure, but…compelling and poignant and real.
Definitely worth an hour of the reader’s time, but
also worth days of introspection. Recommended both
for those who enjoy Bible studies, but also for
those who question the relevance of the Old
Testament for today.
Lisa
Lickel lives in Wisconsin with her high
school teacher husband in a 150-year-old Great Lakes
ship captain's house. She is active in more than one
historical society, belongs to writing and reading
clubs and is the editor in chief of Creative
Wisconsin, the magazine of Wisconsin Regional
Writers. A graduate of the Christian Writer's Guild,
she has written newspaper features and magazine
articles, radio theater, and authored several
inspirational novels. Find her online at
http://lisalickel.com,
http://wisconsinauthorreview.blogspot.com,
http://reflectionsinhindsight.wordpress.com, and
Facebook.
Click
to listen to Andy Farmer interview Judy Salisbury on The
Conversation.
Click
for information on Judy's new talk based upon The
Conversation entitled The Apologetic of His Suffering.
“The Conversation
brings to life that famous encounter between the two
disciples and our Lord Jesus on the road to Emmaus. While it is based in part on an
imaginative reconstruction, it is filled with the throbbing
pulse of the excitement of the sensational impact that our
Lord's resurrection should have on all of our lives.”
Dr.
Walter Kaiser
President Emeritus
Gordon-Conwell Theological
Seminary
“Judy's
touching, sensitive and creative retelling of the Emmaus road
story stands in a class by itself. She handily employs
theological insight by connecting the Old and New Testaments.
This she does, not through bland exposition, but by unpacking
its particulars, and by lacing her narrative with colorful and
creative conversation.”
Dr. Jeffrey L. Seif
Zola Levitt Ministries
“This
little book does a big thing. It takes the age-old truths of the
prophetic accuracy of the Bible and communicates it in an
appealing literary format. In so doing, it portrays one of the
great apologetic tools of the Christian faith in an engaging and
readable form.”
Dr. Norman L. Geisler
Distinguished Professor of
Apologetics
Veritas Evangelical Seminary
“I found
The Conversation remarkable and riveting. Judy Salisbury
portrays Yeshua in such a beautiful, gentle, perfect way. Tears
were rolling down my face as I envisioned him through her
words. She did a fantastic job with the Scriptures, networking
them all together with profound significance—the mark of a
seasoned apologist. The book, as a whole, is fascinating,
captivating, eye-opening, and doctrinally sound. I also think it
would make an awesome movie. The Lord’s hand was definitely in
this project. I can’t wait for my Jewish friends to read it!”
Jennifer
Sands
International Christian
Speaker
Author and 9/11 Widow
“Creative and an entertaining read, The Conversation is a review
of what the Scriptures say about the Messiah and Jesus. Do they
link up? Read this imaginative look at the walk on the Emmaus
Road and see.”
Dr. Darrell L.
Bock
Research Professor of New Testament Studies
Dallas Theological Seminary
“An interesting story, though fictional, yet The Conversation
rings with possibility. I pray that it will have a wide reading
and that many will come to believe that Yeshua is the Messiah of
Israel!”
Dr. David Hocking
Founder, Hope for
Today
“I
was attracted to the subject matter of The Conversation,
the two men, plus 'the Stranger,' on the road to Emmaus. I'm a
visual person, and Judy Salisbury vividly paints the picture of
prophesies regarding Messiah's suffering, death, and
resurrection—and the purpose of it all—with flawless
brushstrokes of color and accuracy. As I journeyed in my mind
with these three I found myself also reflecting back to a trip
my husband and I took to Israel. I wish I had had this
powerful book to give to our Jewish guide. Prayerfully, he would
understand that this account is not simply ‘according to
tradition,’ as he stressed, but according to prophetic truth.”
Jane Davis
Founder, President
& Designer
Not So Plain Jane, Inc.
Tidings Of Love, Inc.
“The Conversation is an excellent sketch of the sort of
things that might have been said by Jesus and the two on the way
to Emmaus after the Resurrection. It presents a
good number of the prophetic passages that we have reason to
believe were recognized as Messianic in the early church. It
gives us a good feel for how Cleopas and his friend might have
reacted to these things as ‘their hearts burned within them.’”
Dr. Robert C.
Newman
Professor of New Testament
Biblical Theological
Seminary
Director, Interdisciplinary
Biblical Research Institute
“The
Conversation is the most concise explanation of the Old
Covenant foretelling Yeshua that I’ve ever read. It’s brilliant.
I love it. In fact the buildup was great and when I got to the
why, I couldn’t put it down.”
Joan Phillips
Writer/Editor, The Christian and
Missionary Alliance
"Judy Salisbury has a way, like no other, to take us back in
time on the road to Emmaus. Through The Conversation she
beautifully and creatively unfolds an extraordinary dialogue
that brings out scriptural insights, and spiritual progression.
The Conversation can't help but change hearts. A must
read for all."
Donna Morley
Author, Conference Speaker
Co-founder, Faith and Reason
Forum
"Judy has filled
The Conversation with so much Scripture that no one could
doubt that Yeshua is the theme of the Bible. The Conversation
really is an illustration of what (Yeshua) said in John 5:39."
Pastor Tom Schaive
Gateway Church,
Portland, Oregon
"(The Conversation is) a
beautifully bound, easy to read, hard to put down, 90-page book
that should spark a wave of personal "Emmaus" journeys this
Easter and all year long in all who read this book. My
recommendation? Get this book! Give this book! Have discussions
with this book! It is amazing and inspired!"
Lori
Anderson, writer
From her book review in The Lewis River Review April 6,
2011 edition
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(The following editorial appeared on
Crosswalk
in March 2011. It was one of their Top Ten articles for that
month.)
Divinely Blinded: Lessons From
the Road to Emmaus
By
Judy Salisbury
When reviewing the
Emmaus account in Luke 24, many people seem to have the same
nagging question. Why didn’t those two downcast disciples of
Jesus (Yeshua) recognize Him immediately when He happened upon
them? I imagine we could agree that immediate recognition
surely would have saved them, at the very least, a two-hour trek
all the way to Emmaus. After all, an early moment of recognition
surely would have prompted the zealous proclamation, “Forget
Emmaus, let’s head to the upper-room now!”
Perhaps some folks,
reading the account for the first time, just might suppose that
it would have been more compassionate for Jesus to reveal His
identity at the onset, especially because they were in such
despair. Surely recognizing Him immediately would have moved
them to a place of rejoicing. This is particularly true since it
is exactly what happened when they finally did recognize Jesus;
back to Jerusalem they sprinted to announce their experiences
with the other disciples.
Indeed, Luke 24:16
states that, their eyes were prevented [or quite
literally were being prevented] from recognizing Him.
However, the question is, Why? Speculating as to why God
does something supernatural always puts you on dangerous
territory. I believe God pays close attention to how folks who
purport to know something, share that something. However, at the
same time, in our pursuit for truth, I also believe it’s healthy
to share our thoughts on particular matters as long as we are
careful to note that our theories remain in the realm of pure
speculation. Therefore, allow me to speculate on the matter of
the disciple’s particular type of Divine blindness.
No doubt, Cleopas and
his traveling partner struggled to reconcile the events they
witnessed with the identity of the One they loved and thought
they had lost forever. They genuinely desired answers; some sort
of context to explain their own personal, why? They had a
picture in their minds. They knew what they saw, what they
experienced, and this they tried to reconcile with their own
presumptions regarding the coming Messiah. They exchanged
meaningful, impassioned words, but until the Word Himself walked
with them, their exchange only amounted to more confusion and
despair. Especially, it seems, when they had to explain those
painful events to that Unannounced Eavesdropper. There seems to
be a bit of irony in their desperate search for truth, as Truth
Himself walked beside them.
For me, there is
something precious in the picture of Christ walking with us in
our darkest hour, which I cannot overlook. So often, as fleshly
humans, we desire an answer when His desire is that we have
the answer—Himself. He knows what is required for us to
reach that place of joy and peace in Him. What an example we
have in the Emmaus account: where two or more are gathered,
there He is in their midst.
When reasoning
amongst ourselves concerning spiritual matters we don’t
understand, there is always a high risk for heresy. Yet, the
Word explains it all. Beginning with Moses, to the Prophets and
the Psalms, we find Him: the Alpha the Omega, the Beginning and
the End, the First and the Last. If you seek Him throughout His
Word, the Lord God, will be found by you. What the natural eye
cannot see, the Spirit will surely reveal. Here is what they
could not see; that the Messiah must suffer and die before He
could enter into His glory.
Though sorrow is for
a night, there is joy in the morning, and those two downcast
disciples needed to see and live that truth. Through their pain,
they could not see that Jesus’
suffering would translate into their eternal joy. I believe the
Lord, in His grace and mercy, prevented them from
recognizing Him so they would have the opportunity to see with
real clarity. They needed to understand by way of His recounting
of the Scriptures concerning Himself. Truly, had He immediately
revealed Himself to them, it would have been obvious that He was
risen indeed. However, it was imperative that they first see
with their hearts and minds before recognizing Him with their
natural eyes. Since our Lord’s desire is for us to share Him
with others through His Word and not His physical body, that is
what they needed to see first. They needed to see Yeshua, Jesus
the Messiah, foretold throughout the Scriptures.
In John 20:29 Jesus
said to Thomas, another chap who needed a bit of clarity,
“Because you have seen Me, have you believed? Blessed are they
who did not see, and yet believed.” It is the weaning of the
child dependent upon the mother always being in clear, physical
view. When the child learns to trust their mothers’ promised
return, they feel free to play peacefully in another room. They
know she is there even though they cannot see her. They trust
she will respond when needed. They are content and lack nothing.
They freely and joyfully go about their busy play. They trust
without sight.
Perhaps those men
needed to trust the Word, from Moses to the Prophets and the
Psalms, before relying upon His physical presence for evidence
to His identity, purpose, and glory. For soon, that was exactly
what they would need to teach others to do, to trust Him by His
Word not the manifesting of His body.
We, like the two
disciples on the road to Emmaus, have sorrows, confusion,
disillusionment, and despair. It is our lot as fallen
individuals, living among other fallen individuals. Yet, 1 Peter
1:6-9 is a great passage to realize the depth and truth of
Jesus’ words in John 20:29: In this you greatly rejoice,
even though now for a little while, if necessary, you have been
distressed by various trials, so that the proof of your faith,
being more precious than gold which is perishable, even though
tested by fire, may be found to result in praise and glory and
honor at the revelation of Jesus Christ; and though you have not
seen Him, you love Him, and though you do not see Him now, but
believe in Him, you greatly rejoice with joy inexpressible and
full of glory, obtaining as the outcome of your faith the
salvation of your souls.
Some people need to “see” by way of proof and evidence. I thank
God for divinely preventing those two downcast men from
immediately seeing or recognizing Him, as it brought about a
cementing of their faith and a radical transformation from
sorrow to joy inexpressible and full of glory, and it is just
that kind of transformation, that turned the world upside down.
Copyright 2011 by Judy Salisbury. All rights reserved.
Permission granted to reprint this editorial in its entirety
only.
For questions or to schedule Judy
Salisbury for your next event, please contact:
Logos
Presentations
1087 Lewis River Road #249
Woodland, WA 98674
(360) 231-2312
logospresentations@tds.net
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