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Read: Under the Influence of Jesus

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By Joe Paprocki (Loyola, 2014)

Joe Paprocki’s latest book, Under the Influence of Jesus, models adult faith formation at its best: faith-full, contemporary, and applicable to everyday life. Readers who approach this book with “same-old, same-old” expectations risk missing both its evangelical passion and its down-to-earth/up-to-heaven spirituality.

Paprocki invites his readers to imbibe the Spirit-filled joy that marked the original Pentecost event, as described in Acts 2. After spending days in seclusion, fearing for their lives, Jesus’ reenergized followers took to the streets of Jerusalem and started proclaiming the news that the Jews’ long-awaited Messiah had indeed come and had risen from the dead. They did it with such Spirit-filled enthusiasm that the mocking bystanders’ first reaction was to accuse the noisemakers of being “under the influence” of too much wine. As Paprocki reminds us, “The crowds . . . weren’t ‘wowed’ by miracles or . . . soaring rhetoric. Rather, what captured their imagination was the [disciples’] total lack of inhibition.”

With examples from familiar movies, literature, and music, the author compares the infectious joy of that first Pentecost to every movie buff’s favorite line from When Harry Met Sally: “I’ll have what she’s having.” Three thousand people joined the Jesus movement in a single day. Paprocki then fast-forwards to later periods of church history (including our own) when Catholics “instituted some kind of ‘prohibition’ against the inebriating influence of the Holy Spirit.”

Under the Influence of Jesus invites today’s Catholics to indulge in the same intoxicating submission to the mystery of the risen Christ that sparked the birth of Christianity. This book does more than inspire renewal of the reader’s faith. “Ultimately,” Paprocki says, “the goal of discipleship is contagion: ‘infecting’ others with the Good News through our words and actions.”

This article appeared in the May 2014 issue of U.S. Catholic (Vol. 79, No. 5, page 43).

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