This is the third post in a series. The previous two were:
The Premise Behind “The Teachings”
“The Teachings” and It’s Place in History
The third leg of my church history novel series is following one family whose employment is in the realm of document creation and preservation. In Doctor Luke’s Assistant, we followed the early career of Augustus ben Adam. Luke hired him to help write a massive biography of Jesus. Augustus had trained in the Roman schools to be an amanuensis, which is a (somewhat) low level secretary—a copyist. He might take dictation, he might copy a letter before the original was sent out, might copy old documents that would soon begin to deteriorate due to age. He could read and write, but was not at a high level. He was a mere assistant.
In DLA I said that Augustus’ father was named Adam. At that time I had no intention of making this a series or writing a prequel. All I revealed about Adam was that he was a Jewish businessman who became Romanized. Adam and his wife made a trip to Rome during DLA and brought back gifts for their children. When he learned that Augustus had become a Christian, he wanted little more to do with his son and didn’t even attend his wedding.
The next book written in the series was a sequel to DLA, titled Preserve The Revelation. In it we follow Augustus and two sons, Luke and Daniel, who assist him in his work, one willingly one unwillingly. They assist John the elderly apostle in writing his gospel and the book of Revelation, with many adventures and twists and turns along the way. Adam doesn’t figure in this book, and I presume he died before it.
While writing PTR, a plot for a prequel to the series came to me. Adam ben Zechariah would be an apprentice scribe in the high priest’s employ. Reasonably zealous and intelligent, he ascribed to something higher than his future son would. A scribe was a confidant of the high priest and teachers of the law, helping them to read and interpret scripture and make new documents for the people. In the book I would have to make a way for Adam to become disenchanted with his Jewish heritage and distrustful if not downright hostile to the growing Christian movement. I accomplished that, I believe, and had it fit seamlessly into the next book.
Which brings me to The Teachings. I chose to add a book between DLA and PTR because that time frame worked well for the historical document, The Didache. As I said in a previous post, some scholars put the writing of The Didache a century later, but many put it right in the period of late in the middle third of the first century. That puts it smack dab in the midst of the Jewish War. I saw that gave me excellent plot lines related to the war.
It also gave plot lines for the family. 66 A.D. was right at the close of DLA. Adam was alive. Augustus was hoping to recreate the longer work that Roman officials destroyed. The two are estranged. The Christian movement was slowly maturing from the early fragmentation that drove Adam away from them. I saw that all of these could be bought together. If, that is, I was able to do it.
Writing book 3 in a series after writing books 2, 4, and 1 probably isn’t a good idea. Not only do I have to make everything work seamlessly with what went before and what came behind, I also have to work in the family dynamics. What helped me along with this was the vision for the whole series coming together as I was writing Preserve The Revelation. I saw the prequel to the series first, then I realized I had both a hole in time and an applicable document between books 2 and 4. Thus, I finished book 4 knowing books 1 and 3 were coming, and I wrote book 1 knowing the basic plot of book 3.
Confusing? Yeah, it is for me. But the family dynamics are coming together nicely as I write The Teachings. Adam and Augustus begin the book somewhat together, somewhat reconciled. At least they are speaking with each other. They go their separate ways. Adam continues as a businessman, having long ago given up the trade of a scribe, and Augustus continues working with documents, though at a somewhat higher level than a mere amanuensis. Their wives will also feature in the story. Readers who read the series in order will already know their wives and be glad I include them.
I have a plan to bring Adam and Augustus back together near the end of the book. I’ve had to change what I first intended, as it wasn’t compatible with what I’ve already written in book 4.
So, that’s the three legs of my new novel. As of right now the manuscript stands at 11,089 words, heading towards between 80,000 and 100,000. Wish me luck.