Make
Your Movie, Mel
by
Christopher Manion
by Christopher Manion
Word
is going around fashionable circles that Mel Gibson’s "Passion"
blames the Jews, or some Jews, for Christ’s passion and death on
the Cross.
Many
of Gibson’s defenders, even some of his collaborators, have gone
out of their way to insist that they only want to tell the story
of Christ’s final hours on earth. In fact, they have even tried
to "adjust" the content of the film to accommodate the views of
their attackers.
They’re
wasting their time.
The
plain truth, of the Gospels and of the controversy that has surrounded
Christianity ever since Christ’s death and resurrection, is simple.
If a person does not believe the Gospel to be the word of God, the
only alternative is to find it offensive. Very offensive. Fundamentally
offensive. And for good reason.
It
is offensive.
Here’s
the rub: if you don’t accept the truth of Scripture, you might read
it as literature, or as cultural history, or poetry, or something.
If you do, you’re likely to read the Passion account in any of the
four Gospels and conclude that many Jews of Jesus’s time were tired
of having him blast them as selfish, prideful hypocrites.
His
attacks were certainly effective: the word "Pharisee" remains to
this day in our language as proof of the staying power of Christ’s
unlovely depiction. So the unbelieving reader might logically conclude
that these reactionary, vindictive Pharisees did Jesus in, with
the timely help of a Roman procurator, an angry mob, and some sadistic
soldiers.
Modernists
nowadays view Jesus as a genial figure, a loving guy, better probably
than the rest of us, really a bearer of "truth against power," kinda
like Anita Hill. Well, the Gospels pretty well spell it out: the
powers that were didn’t enjoy Christ’s messing around with their
little deal, not at all. Too many average folks were swarming to
proclaim him King, even Messiah – which a lot of Jews really didn’t
believe in all that much anyway.
Of
course a lot of half-hearted "Christians" – of all denominations
– don’t really buy into it either.
Put
yourself in their shoes. Here’s what you’ve got to believe if you
take the Gospel seriously:
- There
is a God. He created you. You, and your parents, all the way
back to your first parents, Adam and Eve, offended Him, and
sinned against him, succumbing to selfish pride. Sin lost us
paradise and brought on death.
- You are
a sinner, and you are headed to Hell – an eternity of suffering
the pain of the loss of God, for whose company you were created
(and for no other end) – unless you accept the spiritual truth
of the Gospel and embrace Jesus Christ as Lord and Redeemer.
- Yes, the
historical account of the Gospel has the Jews and the Romans
conspiring to kill Christ, and being glad of it: "That day Herod
and Pilate became friends before this they had been enemies."
- But the
spiritual dimension of the Gospel teaches us that God sent His
only begotten Son to save us from sin, and to open the doors
to salvation for everyone on earth, Jew and Greek, even barbarians,
to the ends of the earth.
- Furthermore,
Christ wasn’t "killed by the Jews," or by anyone else. He laid
down His life of His own will. "No one takes it from me, but
I lay it down of my own free will." No one "killed" Christ.
Not the Jews, not Pilate, not the Roman soldiers, whatever language
they conversed in.
- The forgiveness
of sin was the purpose of Christ’s redemptive mission, and
every sinner bears the blame for the Crucifixion. Christ would
have died for you, if you were the only sinner in history.
This
is merely arms-length analysis. You don’t have to be Christian to
understand it (although you can become one if you embrace
it and believe it, experience a Pauline "metanoia" and clothe yourself
in the garment of Jesus Christ).
Why
is this so hard to understand in the modern secular world we live
in – as an intellectual exercise, putting aside faith for the moment?
Well,
picture yourself a secular fellow. You know a little about the Bible,
enough to know that you don’t "believe" it. Yet you also know that
millions, perhaps billions, of people do believe it.
So
where do you stand with those folks? Whatever they think of themselves
(which is no concern of yours, you’re a very modern sort of chap,
really, live and let live), these people actually believe that YOU
are a sinner. That YOU are headed for Hell unless you repent. That,
far from being King of the Hill, as Thomas Hobbes, Larry Flynt,
and countless others would have it, you are, well, sinful slime,
nothing, without God. Why, you can’t even say something true unless
the "Holy Spirit" guides you to say it!
There
you are, they’re calling you pond scum, and you’re seething, mad
as Hell (oops!) at these presumptuous, parading holier-than-thou
types who are telling YOU how sinful YOU are – and they don’t even
know you!
If
there weren’t an Anti-Defamation League out there already, by golly,
you’d sure want to go out and start one. And with good reason.
Why, some of these people might convince your friends, perhaps even
members of your own family, that you are a "sinner," and
turn them against you. Your whole little world, which you had spent
a lifetime constructing far away from any aroma of religion (unless
it happened to be pagan), might come tumbling down. It isn’t "live
and let live" any more. It’s do or die. As Hobbes said, "kill or
be killed."
Now
the Christian might quickly respond, "Wait a minute, I’m the greatest
of sinners. I need salvation too, and I am only so powerfully grateful
to Jesus because my sins are so great. I am no better than you.
I am worse, a craven sinner who deserves only an eternity in the
deepest pit of Hell. God loves you just as He loves me. Repent.
Love Him back."
To
the ears of our properly secular fellow, all these words would be
no more comforting than Christ’s words were to Pontius Pilate. Like
him, you’d probably want to wash your hands of the whole thing,
after sending him off to his just reward.
The
Christian notion of Christ’s very existence as the spotless Lamb
of God offered in sacrifice for our sins – His very existence,
you see is an insult, an affront, even an attack, on the unbeliever,
and the little world the non-believer has constructed to protect
himself from it all.
After
all, why should you celebrate "forgiveness" if you’ve got nothing
to forgive? If you’ve done nothing wrong? If you have committed
no sins? Or if you believe that someone else, not Christ, is the
source of any forgiveness you might need?
This
is the insult, the in-your-metaphysical-realty-face challenge that
Christianity poses to every man, woman, and child in history. Either
the Lord of History offers you salvation, and you celebrate, eternally
and gratefully. Or some guy who might or might not have existed
has some religiously-crazed followers who just drive you up the
wall, and you wish they’d shut up.
"The
stone that was rejected by the builders has become the cornerstone"
– if you’re the original builders, under contract ("covenant"),
you’re going to be offended by this – especially when you read that
"No one comes to the Father except through me." Well, Mr. Foxman
was named Abraham, not María Jesús, and you don’t
have to be Jewish to understand why such a portrayal of orthodox
Christian teaching might cause him a modicum of discontent. Even
the apostles said, "This is a hard teaching." More than once they
wanted to abandon Christ. Even Peter denied Him. Three times. During
the Passion.
Christians
just have to re-learn, in every age, that, sooner or later, their
faith is going to offend somebody. Why else would Christ have forewarned
his followers, "Blessed are ye, when they revile you and persecute
you, and speak every evil thing against you, falsely, on my account"?
And
so it is. Christians who believe that God is so loving that His
only Son came to die of His own free will so He could redeem all
mankind such believers are called unloving; Christians who believe
the Christ is "the way, the truth, and the life" are called untruthful.
Christians who believe that no sinner is beyond forgiveness are
not forgiven, but reviled, with names that vary with the age and
the epoch, but always mean the same thing: "You don’t love, you
hate. You don’t tell the truth, you lie. You aren’t humble, you’re
proud. Your God doesn’t forgive, he punishes."
After
all, as Augustine’s City
of God so clearly explains, Christians have to spend their
entire lives among people who believe that, whoever killed Christ,
they did the rest of the world a favor.
So
are Christians to be silenced any time the truth might offend somebody?
Quite
the contrary. Tell the world the whole truthful story, so at least
the objectors will know what they’re rejecting.
All
this teaches us a very simple truth, and both believers and non-believers
must recognize it. Christ’s passion, death, and resurrection, either
happened or they didn’t. Believers cannot change the story, water
it down, tell it selectively, or shrug off certain more "offensive"
facets in order to please nonbelievers.
There
are two reasons for this.
First
of all, Christ is "the way, the truth, and the life." Nobody, believers
or not, "owns the rights" to His story, and the right to amend it
at will, or upon the demand of someone who might find it offensive.
The truth is the truth, and that "hard teaching," that metaphysical
fact, cannot be changed by the whim of some contemporary fellow,
however well-intentioned.
Second,
and certainly less important but certainly pertinent: some non-believers
will never be satisfied, no matter what changes are made in the
details of the story or the manner of its telling. For it is not
a painting, or a book, or a movie, but Christ Himself, the Alpha
and the Omega, Redeemer of mankind, who is the problem. Not an iota
can be changed. He is "the same, yesterday, today, and forever."
Believers
will nod their heads, non-believers will shake theirs. Fine. That’s
the way of the world. But no human effort can shake the faith of
the believer, and no fancy editing job will change the skeptic’s
doubts.
When
Martin Scorsese announced that he wanted to make a film of "The
Last Temptation of Christ," with several sexual episodes that departed
from Kazantzakis’s original novel (and, of course, from Scripture),
Mother Teresa wrote him a letter. "You are making this movie to
make money," she said. "Tell me how much money you want to make,
and I will pay it to you. But do not make this movie." As she told
this story (in Callao, Peru, in August 1989), she made it clear
that she deplored the falsehood being injected into the life
of Christ by the whim of an "artist."
In
contrast, those who are most stridently attacking Gibson appear
to object to the elements of his film which correspond faithfully
to the account in Sacred Scripture.
Gibson
has reached out constantly and openly to his detractors, to no avail.
In contrast, Scorsese never even bothered to answer Mother Teresa.
Make
your movie, Mel, and we will come.
August
15, 2003
Christopher
Manion [send him mail] is
president of Manion Music, LLC, which produces copyrighted, royalty-free
music collections for telecommunications media and commercial and
hospitality sites that use background music or music-on-hold. He
writes from the Shenandoah Valley.
Copyright
© Christopher Manion 2003. All Rights reserved.
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