Shortly after the Civil War...
Illustration
Shortly after the Civil War ended two former Union army officers met by chance on a train. They were Colonel Robert Ingersoll, a lawyer from Illinois, and General Lewis (Lew) Wallace, a lawyer from Indiana. Both were agnostics, Ingersoll a very militant one. In their conversation Wallace mentioned Jesus, and suggested, "I think an interesting romance could be written about that man." Ingersoll agreed and thought that Wallace was just the man to do it, but he also urged him to demolish the prevailing view of Jesus as the Son of God and paint him as he actually was -- a man among men. Wallace began collecting research on Jesus. He read the Gospels and reread them. His preparation was intense and thorough. Finally, he came to the firm conviction that Jesus was not merely a man among other men, but he indeed was what the centurion at the cross testified he was, namely "the Son of God." The finished product was the novel Ben Hur, which has had a lasting appeal even to our own generation. Even the strongest doubts can lead to the assurance of faith. -- Hasler
