Happy Resurrection Day, aka Easter. And sorry, trannies, I am not honoring Brandon's "Transgender Day" or whatever he's calling it… I do Christ, not politics!
But in honor of my Lord and Savior and Redeemer's arising from the dead or grave days after His crucifixion and burial, I will state another reason I was inspired to write the three novels that make up The Prodigal Band Trilogy. Having been laid spiritually empty on some occasions beginning in the early 70s when I was trying to 'find myself,' and also having experienced some spiritual emptiness in the 90s (dealing with New Agers had something to do with that), I had to incorporate spiritual emptiness within my main characters—the band members as well as their women—because they had to overcome this spiritual emptiness as I was overcoming it. Thus, the novels aren't just about the journey of the band and women out of spiritual satanic-like darkness into the Light of Christ based on the Gospel of Luke Chapter 15 Parable of the Prodigal Son, but are also based on my own journey from spiritual emptiness to spiritual fulfillment and happiness and without fear (think of that line from Dune here: "fear is the mind killer." © 1965 Herbert Properties LLC).
I do not remember the exact date some spiritual entity 'spoke' into my mind that I had to begin the novel series—get the characters I had created in the late 60s out of my head at last—but it was in October, and I think the year was 1993. So, while mothering a baby girl and also raising a toddler boy, I began writing what I knew of the story of my rock band characters. But, as I was writing the book that would later be called Battle of the Band, I realized the plot and theme were, well, spiritually empty! Yes, they were into the 'sex, drugs, and rock and roll' lifestyle, but that rock star lifestyle would, by the mid-90s, drag them and their women as well into addictions, alcoholism, sexual perversion, and personalities that were empty shells of their former selves. In other words, spiritual emptiness and even suicidal behavior. The climax to end the novel has two of the band members nearly dying of heart attacks as the rest of the band and women live in fear of their passing—until God's spirit beings dispense with the evil ones and guide the two out of death spirals and guide also their watchers: the novel ends with them realizing they have to change their 'riotous living' ways! This event takes place in the second novel, The Prophesied Band, where, at the climax, they were given their 'missions of God,' because they were ready for these missions…well, almost. In The Prodigal Band to end the trilogy, they do 'missions on themselves' so-to-speak: they accept Christ as Lord and Savior, which guides them into completing their missions they were given. The spiritual emptiness had been overcome, first by witnessing and partaking in a miracle, and then later witnessing another life-saving miracle.
So that, in completing the trilogy, spiritual fulfillment took a hold of me beginning in late February, 1997, when I witnessed my own personal 'shining' so-to-speak, which inspired me to complete my own authoring 'mission.' That is why, on this day, Resurrection Day, I wish spiritual fulfillment on all who read this post. Blessings!
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