If You Are Willing to Accept It
DAVID.PETRA
あらすじ
If You Are Willing to Accept It is not a book written to persuade, debate, or systematize. It is written to invite. In the Gospels, Jesus makes a striking statement about John the Baptist. He does not speak cautiously. He does not soften His words. He simply says, "If you are willing to accept it, he is Elijah who is to come." Then He moves on, leaving the weight of the claim to rest on the listener. Most readers hurry past this moment. This book does not. Instead of resolving the tension, it lingers with it. It asks why Scripture preserves figures who do not die, why Elijah's life is left unfinished, why John appears precisely where Elijah is promised to return, and why Jesus speaks of identity rather than resemblance. It also asks why recognition so often fails when fulfillment arrives in unexpected form. This is not an argument for doctrine, nor an attempt to force a conclusion. It is a contemplative meditation on identity, fulfillment, and the freedom of God to act beyond our categories. Drawing carefully from Scripture, the book explores themes of mission without memory, humility without self-assertion, and recognition that precedes understanding. Along the way, it reflects on figures like Enoch, Elijah, and John the Baptist, not to build a system, but to expand the reader's sense of how vast God's ways may be. Written in a tone inspired by the clarity of C. S. Lewis and the sense of awe found in Bishop Barron's preaching, If You Are Willing to Accept It is for readers who love Scripture deeply, but sense that it still holds more mystery than we often allow. It is for those who believe that faith is not weakened by wonder, and that God is not honored by being reduced to explanations. This book does not ask the reader to agree. It asks the reader to look again. If, by the final page, you find yourself less certain of your categories and more aware of the greatness of God, then the book has accomplished its purpose.