| Author Interview Joe Boyd: Between Two Kingdoms By Hannah Goodwyn CBN.com Producer
 CBN.com - Twelve years in the making, Between Two Kingdoms is the fictional  work author Joe Boyd created as he contemplated the meaning of true Christian living.  The story follows the exploits and transformations of a seven year old boy named Tommy. His home is in the Upper Kindgom, where all of the people are eternally children. There lives the Good Prince and his father, the King. Adventure ensues when -- at the Good Prince's bidding -- Tommy and friends travel down to the Lower Kingdom to save those whom the other prince, Senkrad, wishes to deceive and control. It's a classic tale of good vs. evil, and our role in it all.  Author Joe Boyd recently spoke with CBN.com about this new book and the faith behind it.  CBN.com: Between Two Kingdoms is an allegory  about children, but I read somewhere that you wrote it for adults? Joe Boyd: Yeah, we called it a fairy-tale  for adults or a children's story for adults. I actually started writing 12  years ago and really didn't intend on it being published. It was a little bit  of personal therapy. Everything I've been learning about God in my head, I was  trying to get it in my heart in a story or a world that I could sort of work  with it and think about it more like a kid… referring to the verse where Jesus  says, "You have to receive the Kingdom as a child". I also read a book by G.K. Chesterton  called Orthodoxy.  He says the greatest form of truth is a fairy-tale, because it just has a way  of getting into our hearts. So those sorts of things just led me to start  creating this world where I could express some of the truths that were stuck in  my head.  CBN.com: The main characters we  follow in Between Two Kingdoms are  children though. What really compelled you to write this for adults instead of  focusing on reaching kids through this fairytale?  Joe: Yeah, well it really came out of  pastoring and trying to teach people how to receive the Kingdom as a child. So  even when I can give someone the book, I can say "You have to read this through  the eyes of a child or it won't make sense." I guess there's a secret plan on  my part to just try to have people really embrace that. Because you know some  people only think it takes a few pages to get into it, but sometimes it does  take something to open up what may be considered something that's for children.  So that was definitely what was behind it. And you  know it really is genre-wise more in sort of the Narnia and Lord of the Rings kind of world. Those books I read when I was a kid, and then I read them again  several times as an adult; so, personally just sort of as a fan. That's one of  my favorite forms of literature, something a tween or an adult could read. It's  something you could still read when you're older. That was the goal. I'm not as  smart those guys, but I'm a disciple of them and tried to learn from them.  CBN.com: What was the initial  inspiration for it? You start talking about that about your own walk, and how  it came out of that. Joe: I had grown up in the church and  always wanted to be a pastor and start my own church. I went to Bible College  in the seminary, and what started to happen is after I started my church in my 20s,  I came to a suddenly different understanding of what the Gospel really was. I  read Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John a lot, over and over again. And it just  seemed a little different than the pretty simple, "You're a sinner, you need a  savior" kind of Gospel I had been presented with. Jesus kept on talking about  this idea of the Kingdom of God and the Kingdom of Heaven.  When I read that early on, I always assumed it meant like, "Heaven when you die…way  out there." But, I came to realize that Jesus was talking about some sort of  reality in the present that would also be real in the future. So I wanted to  try to unpack the idea that the Kingdom   of Heaven is here and  now, and sort of doing battle with the Kingdom of the world. I think we do  ourselves a disservice when we delegate Heaven to the future. So that is the  main intellectual motivation. Let's try to understand this as the two Kingdoms  doing battle in the present. CBN.com: Tell us a little bit about  lives of the main characters.  Joe: Tommy is kind of the reluctant  hero. Everyone in the Upper   Kingdom is seven years  old. They are eternally seven and they never age. Before the book even starts,  we find out he's been on one sort of expedition with the Good Prince down to  the Lower Kingdom where people do grow old and  age. So the story starts with Tommy interacting with his best friend, Mary. And  Mary has never been down. She doesn't want to go down. She thinks it's too scary  and dangerous. If Tommy is a reluctant hero, Mary is the very reluctant one;  she doesn't want to go at all.  I started  church in Las Vegas  in my 20s, and my church was mainly made of people who weren't Christians  before. People go to Vegas and sort of make a mess of their lives and then look  for God. What I find is that after about a year of them coming to church, they  didn't have any friends anymore that they used to have. Sometimes that's good  if you're coming out of an abusive relationship or addiction, but it just  seemed kind of overkill to me and kind of odd that all of these people that  were important to them … they don't talk to anymore, they're just in the  church. So especially when I first started writing this, I was trying to let  people know that it's not supposed separate like that; you're supposed to have  friends. And not even friends for the subversive purpose of trying to convert  them. God sent us into the world to interact with people and to love people. We  miss out on a lot of what the Kingdom is if we only stay with what I would call  "Upper Kingdom" people, if we never really live  our lives out in the world.  CBN.com: In Between Two Kingdoms, it's obvious that the Good Prince represents  Jesus and the King, God. This Senkrad character, the other Prince, how did you  come up with that name?  Joe: Yeah, there may be a secret. If  you read it backwards, it's darkness; it's symbolic of the reign and rule of  the Lower Kingdom. It's purposely not, as the book  unfolds, not obviously Satan. I wanted to present the evil presence of the Lower  Kingdom, as sort of … of course there's parts that are reminiscent of Satan, but  also just sort mankind in our own evil tendency. I might have really bad  demonology or whatever, but I'll always have this feeling like I'm sort of evil  enough that I can make lots of bad decisions without the devil's help, you know  what I mean? So I just wanted to express that; it's sort of a micro and a macro  thing in the book that all of the kings are at battle with each other, but  every character is having a battle between the Upper and Lower Kingdom  in their heart. And Senkrad represents someone who's fully given into the Lower Kingdom.  I'm also a big Star Wars fan, so he's  my Darth Vader pretty much. And there's even hope for redemption for him at the  end.  CBN.com: You mentioned before about  how Tommy is seven years old. All of the main characters are eternally seven  when they arrive in the Upper   Kingdom. Why that age? Joe: Yeah, it seemed like a good age  if you're going to be an age forever. You don't want to get too close to being  a teenager.  CBN.com: Was seven a good age for  you? Joe: It wasn't bad. There's a little  symbolism in the number of perfection being seven. But for the most part,  there's an age where you're obviously not totally dependent on your parents anymore,  but you're still very much a child. And that's the age I was going for, so it  could have been eight or nine I guess. I remember when I was seven or eight. I  could first ride my bike three houses down to my buddy's house without my  parents having to walk alongside me. So it's at that age where you get your  first freedoms, and yet you know that you're a kid. There's no doubt. When you  start to get to 12, 13 you start to think you're sort of an adult. So I wanted  an age that they have freedom to have fun and do things on their own, and then  still know clearly that they're a kid. CBN.com:  At one point in the book, Tommy  starts believing he was born to fulfill the mission the Good Prince shares with  him. How important was it to include this in the book? Joe: Yeah, I think honestly it was a  theme that emerged after I finished the book, and I looked back and saw. It  must be in my heart because it was in there a lot. I didn't really realize how  much it impressed all of the characters. But I do think that's probably a  little autobiographical -- is just trying to find how God made me and how I  experienced His joy when I knew how He made me. I'm a storyteller, so I've done  lots of different things in my life. I've been an actor, a screen-writer, a  teacher, pastor, and author, but it's all the same thing to me. Realizing that  God made me to tell stories, I'm not really content in Him unless I'm doing  that. So I just want other people to find how God has made them and what He has  made them to do.  The New  Testament is really clear on spiritual gifts; and I have a hunch there are a  few gifts that Paul didn't mention that could still emerge. Jesus builds this  church, and the way He does it is by gifting people. It takes some research,  and developments, and experimentation to figure out how you're made and wired.  So hopefully after reading this, people will have a little more energy and  courage to try some things to see, "Maybe God did make me this way". I think  we've seen here that it's OK to fail if you're trying things for the right  reasons. It's through the failures that we really find out who we are, what  we're made to be. 
  Hannah   Goodwyn serves as   the Family and Entertainment producer for CBN.com. For more articles and information, visit Hannah's bio page.
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