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Would Jesus Do Time?
Posted by Literary Titan

Would Jesus Do Time? is a fierce, satirical stage work that imagines Jesus returning in present-day America, reenacting the cleansing of the temple, and discovering that the modern justice system has little patience for mercy, context, or holiness. After overturning tables in a church filled with Christian merchandise, Jesus is violently arrested, jailed, debated over by politicians, softened by visits from Mary and Mother Mary, and ultimately tried for crimes that the play frames as both legally plausible and spiritually grotesque. Along the way, the story moves through police brutality, prison labor, public defenders, media distortion, partisan hypocrisy, loneliness, shame, forgiveness, and the aching question beneath the title: would a society that claims to worship Jesus recognize him once he stood among the condemned?
I found the book at its strongest when it lets outrage and tenderness collide. The scenes inside the jail gave the story its most human pulse for me, especially the conversations with Don, Gunz, and Beaux. Beaux’s desire to be “something” beyond the narrow mythology of street fame lands with real sadness, because Jesus doesn’t simply scold him into goodness; he sees the entrepreneurial hunger beneath the damage. I also felt the ache of the visitation scene with Mary and Mother Mary, where the language of loneliness becomes more than a prison critique. It becomes a lament for all the ways incarceration strips a person of touch, responsibility, ordinary affection, and the small daily proofs of being alive. Chaffin is writing from a place of conviction, and that conviction gives even the roughest passages an unignorable heat.
The writing itself is brash, profane, theatrical, and deliberately unruly. The musical numbers can sometimes feel biting and funny, sometimes blunt, yet they also give the piece its unique feel. I admired the audacity of placing comedy beside spiritual dread, as when a guard’s crude “Step on a Turd” routine becomes a grotesque little window into dehumanization, or when the courtroom turns into a spectacle of performance, manipulation, and public appetite. There’s a real dramatic instinct here. The image of Jesus in an orange jumpsuit is provocative, but what stayed with me more was Jesus praying in fear before trial, Peter and Judas holding him, and the final guilty verdict hardening into a “modern-day crucifixion.” Those moments have a raw spiritual melancholy that cuts through the satire.
I came away from Would Jesus Do Time? feeling challenged and unexpectedly moved. Its force comes from discomfort, from the way it asks whether compassion is merely a word people admire until it demands something of them. This book has a unique and passionate voice. I’d recommend it to readers who are open to politically charged religious satire, prison justice narratives, experimental musical drama, and stories that use provocation not for shock alone, but to press hard on the soul.
Pages: 134 | ASIN : B0GTMLKK9R
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Posted in Book Reviews, Four Stars
Tags: author, Badger Book Series, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, christianity, Dramas & Plays, ebook, fiction, Fiction Satire, goodreads, indie author, J.L. Chaffin, jesus, kindle, kobo, legal drama, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, satire, series, story, Would Jesus Do Time?, writer, writing




