It was Christmas Eve in Thailand, 1972. Thanks to Armed Forces Radio “Silent Night” was playing in our room . . . but it was not really a “silent” night at all. I was a young Air Force wife visiting my husband serving that year in Southeast Asia—but even in my naïveté, I knew something big was imminent. Linebacker II was in progress—the 1972 Christmas bombing of Hanoi—and the constant sound of take-offs (“please, Lord”) and landings (“thank you, Lord”) from the Air Base was surreal in dissonance with the sweet music I was hearing on the radio. A rescue was in the works, and the POWs, so long tortured and confined in Hanoi, heard and felt the thunderous aircraft noise with great hope and expectation for their eventual release from captivity.
The Story Behind the Story of “Ben Hur”
Excellent or Praiseworthy is posted on Monday and Thursday nights.
Editor’s Note: This posting is shared by a friend of Excellent or Praiseworthy, author Jocelyn Green. Jocelyn is the award-winning author of ten including fiction and nonfiction books. A former military wife herself, she offers encouragement and hope to military wives worldwide through her Faith Deployed books and The 5 Love Languages Military Edition, which she co-authored with best-selling author Dr. Gary Chapman. Her Heroines Behind the Lines Civil War novels, inspired by real heroines on America’s home front, are marked by their historical integrity and gritty inspiration.
During our first year of marriage, my husband Rob and I rented the classic film Ben Hur with Charlton Heston to watch the night before Easter. The chariot race came up awfully fast. “I feel like we’re supposed to care about who wins,” I told Rob. “Shouldn’t we get to know the characters a bit?” The movie was over in less than an hour. “Huh. I thought this was supposed to be a long movie.” We shrugged and shook our heads. Only after taking the disc out and examining it more carefully did we realize what happened. We had played Side B.
Tonight my family and I are watching Ben Hur starting with Side A. (Funny how it’s so much more satisfying that way.) It’s a night-before-Easter tradition we cherish every year. The hope and awe of the characters when Christ is raised from the dead is absolutely contagious. and the best part is knowing that that Christ, the one who healed lepers and mended broken lives, is still alive, and He is my Christ, my Lord too. Hallelujah! A couple of years ago, while I was writing my Civil War series, I was delighted to learn that Lew Wallace, the author of Ben Hur, was a Civil War general before writing the novel. But it was only a few days ago that I learned more about the amazing story of how it all came about.
Lew Wallace, circa 1861
In September 1876, Wallace was on his way by rail to join thousands of other Union veterans at the Third National Soldiers Reunion in Indianapolis. When a man Wallace recognized popped into his sleeper car and invited him to have a talk, he agreed. The man was Robert Ingersoll, who had been a soldier at the Battle of Shiloh, where Wallace’s military reputation had been stained by not bringing his men to the battle in time. In fact, the Union defeat at Shiloh was blamed, at least in part, on Wallace’s failure. But Ingersoll, now the nation’s most prominent atheist, didn’t want to rehash Shiloh with the general that night on the train. Instead, he wanted to share his passion: the nonexistence of God.
Ingersoll talked until the train reached its destination. “He went over the whole question of the Bible, of the immortality of the soul, of the divinity of God, and of heaven and hell,” Wallace later recalled. “He vomited forth ideas and arguments like an intellectual volcano.” The arguments had a powerful effect on Wallace. Departing the train, he walked the pre-dawn streets of Indianapolis alone. In the past he had been indifferent to religion, but after his talk with Ingersoll his ignorance struck him as problematic, “a spot of deeper darkness in the darkness.” He resolved to devote himself to a study of theology, “if only for the gratification there might be in having convictions of one kind or another.”¹
Rather than study a stack of theology books, however, Wallace took a completely novel approach–literally. He decided to explore the divinity of Christ by writing a novel about Him. That novel was born four years later in the form of Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ, and was to become one of the best-selling American novels of all time. What delicious irony! A late-night conversation in which an atheist tried to persuade another into the camp of unbelief actually set the wheels in motion for one of the most influential biblical epics ever written. Amazing. Literature critics were less impressed, but readers loved it. The book sold as many as a million copies in its first three decades in print.
Ulysses S. Grant read Ben-Hur in a single, 30-hour sitting. President James A. Garfield wrote to Wallace after finishing it, “With this beautiful and reverent book you have lightened the burden of my daily life.” Jefferson Davis’s daughter Varina read the novel to him from night til dawn, “oblivious to the flight of time.”² Ben-Hur was published fifteen years after the end of the Civil War, and a few years after the official end of the Reconstruction Era. It is the story of compassion triumphing over revenge, and of Christ’s resurrection. I can only imagine how that must have resonated with Americans struggling for rebirth. The truth is timeless, for those who saw the risen Christ, for Americans piecing their lives back together after the Civil War, for you and for me.
Because Jesus lives, Hope lives!
Sources: 1. Swansburg, John. “The Passion of Lew Wallace,” Slate.com (link is external). March 26, 2013. 2. Ibid.
Questions to Share:
1. If you have seen the movie, Ben Hur, share one thing that you remember about the chariot race.
2. The face of Jesus is never shown in the movie, but His compassion is shown clearly at the beginning of the movie when He gives Ben Hur a drink of water. Ben Hur never forgets that act of kindness which introduces him to the man of Jesus Christ. Do you remember an act of kindness done for you which was instrumental in your decision to become a Christian?
Comments (0)