Les Miserables is my favorite novel. My wife and I have seen the play twice in London and I have read the book one and a half times.<br><br>Hugo tells us the purpose of the book near the end (pg 1042): “This book which the reader has now before his eyes is, from one end to the other, in its whole and in its details, whatever may be the intermissions, the exceptions, or the defaults, the march from evil to good, from injustice to justice, from the false to the true, from night to day, from appetite to conscience, from rottenness to life, from brutality to duty, from Hell to Heaven, from nothingness to God. Starting point: matter; goal: the soul. Hydra at the beginning, angel at the end.”<br><br>What does this mean? The book is about unselfish sacraficial love. The love of God for us.<br><br>The play captures the essence of the book and adds a new dimension with the music. Since Hugo states his purpose is to present the journey of every Christian from darkness to light he must and I believe does present the Gospel along the way. The play begins in prison and ends at a marriage feast and along the way the Gospel of unconditional love and forgiveness is displayed in narrative and song again and again.<br><br>The play opens in a prison camp to which Jean Valjean was sent 19 years ago for stealing a loaf of bread to feed his sister’s sick boy. Jean Valjean, who represents every Christian begins as we do in prison, the prison of sin.<br><br>Next we meet The Bishop of Digne (deeg-nay’) who is indeed a remarkable man. The book actually begins with him and tells many stories of his living the Gospel in this little village. For example the Bishop of Digne gives up his palace to live in a 5 room hospital building (page 6): He said to the director of the hospital “Listen, Monsieur Director, to what I have to say. There is evidently a mistake here. There are 26 of you in 5 or 6 small rooms; there are only 3 of us and space for sixty. There is a mistake, I tell you. You have my house and I have yours. Restore mine to me; you are at home.”. So the Bishop gave his palace to the suffering and lived in a small 5 room building with no lock on the door, only a latch. Valjean had gone to 2 inns and several houses offering money for food and shelter all refused because he was an ex-convict. Exhausted physically and emotionally he was pointed to the Bishop’s humble residence by an old woman and knocks at the door which has no lock.<br><br>Jean Valjean is taken in by the Bishop of Digne (deeg-nay’) though he is a known convict and when he steals the silver, the Bishop gives him even more and dismisses the charges against him. The bishop is a picture of Christ, who loves us even when we are unlovable and forgives us. After Valjean encounters his forgiveness, he is changed. God has raised him out of darkness & bought his soul, just a Christ raises us by His death and resurrection. Valjran becomes a little Christ, forgiving and saving others. But first there is a struggle presented in his solilique.<br><br>Valjean changed by the power of the Gospel and moved by the Holy Spirit (what Spirit comes to move my life?) decides to take the Bishop's advice and use the silver to begin a new life.<br><br>Though many people die in both the play and the book, they both end with the theme of redemption and resurrection. This is why you felt at ease.<br><br>I hope this is of help.<br><br>Blessings,<br> George


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