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For Christmas, a very personal reading of St. John’s Gospel, on stage at the Sheen Center

SHEEN CENTER

Sheen Center | YouTube | Fair Use

John Burger - published on 11/08/19

The one-man play evolved out of a difficult time in the life of Broadway actor Ken Jennings.

“In the beginning was the Word … And the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us.”

Those words, from the opening of the Gospel According to St. John, are ideal for contemplation of the Mystery of the Incarnation, celebrated during Advent and Christmas. The “Word,” the Logos, is the Second Person of the Holy Trinity, Jesus Christ.

So you might read these words during the liturgical season that begins with the First Sunday of Advent, December 1 (or November 15 for Eastern Christians). But for a chance to dwell on the words for a longer time — about an hour and a half — the Sheen Center for Thought and Culture in New York is where you want to go.

From November 30 to December 29, the Sheen Center will present The Gospel of John, a one-man play by Ken Jennings. A veteran Broadway actor, Jennings won the Drama Desk award for his role in the original New York production of Sweeney Todd. He has spent a lifetime acting on Broadway, Off-Broadway, film and television.

Born in Jersey City, New Jersey, in 1947, Jennings attended St. Peter’s Preparatory School and St. Peter’s College there. He is best known for his role as Tobias Ragg in the 1979 Broadway premiere of Stephen Sondheim’s Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street. Jennings received the 1979 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical for this role. He has also performed in several other shows, including Grand Hotel, Sideshow, and Urinetown.

The 72-year-old actor started memorizing the Gospel According to St. John as a spiritual practice during a difficult time in his life. In time, he worked his way through the entire Gospel, learning it chapter by chapter. As he mastered the text, his one-man version of the abridged Gospel became a theater piece.

“I had already memorized parts of the Gospel before, just as part of my prayer life,” Jennings said in an interview. But as he was going through a legal battle over visitation rights with his son, his favorite Gospel began to play a bigger role.

“It was during this time that I thought ‘What can I do?’ Suddenly, I’m not seeing that boy,” he recounted. “I thought, ‘Well, I could get very depressed and frustrated, or I can turn it into something good.'”

Without having to care for and cook for his 13-year-old son, he had more time on his hands. “I thought, ‘I’m going to memorize the Gospel of John. It will heal my soul and assuage some of my worry,'” he recalled.

Jennings said he also needed something “in the silence of my apartment to get my mind off the stress” of the legal battle.

He was also motivated by another favorite part of Scripture, 1 Peter 5:7, which reads, “Cast all your anxieties on him, for he cares about you.”

“In memorizing this Gospel, that’s what I was doing: casting all my anxieties on him,” Jennings explained.

His approach to staging the Gospel has to do with his feeling that it is a very “personal” account of the life of Christ.

One day he was contemplating the verses, “Now Jesus did many other signs in the presence of [his] disciples that are not written in this book. But these are written that you may [come to] believe that Jesus is the Messiah, the Son of God, and that through this belief you may have life in his name.”

In thinking about the phrase “But these are written that you may come to believe,” for the first time the word “you” struck him as being “decidedly singular,” he said. Even though a theologian told him that the word is plural in the original Greek, he said, “it struck me that it might have been written ‘so that you, Ken, might believe.'”

“So I thought this is what I can bring to the stage production. I think I might be able to do this, because of my experience as an actor and because of my belief, and I thought John probably told this story [orally] over and over again before it was in written form,” he said. “I can tell this Gospel in a way as if it’s John himself telling the Gospel, John himself saying ‘Look, I was there; this is what I saw. … so that you can believe that Jesus is the son of God and you may have life.'”

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