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"Not peace but a sword" (Safire slams The Passion)
New York Times ^ | Mar 1 04 | William Safire

Posted on 02/29/2004 9:12:37 PM PST by churchillbuff

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To: diotima
Some one stop me before the violent message of the New Testament causes me to kill and maim.......
Funny you should mention that, because someone shares the concern: NYC Police Watch Gibson Film for 'Hate'

151 posted on 03/02/2004 11:30:38 AM PST by AnnaZ (I hate Times New Roman... and it's all Mel Gibson's fault!)
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To: Askel5
(Sorry it took so long to get back to you...)
 
 
 
I'm differentiating between Catholicism and the other, sometimes eponymous, sects of Christianity because one critical difference between the faith of Mel Gibson and the faith of some self-styled Christians is that Gibson is expressly forbidden from condemning anyone -- or perceiving them as condemned -- simply for their failure to recognize the Christ or accept the mystery of redemption.
This isn't a conversation you want to have with me. Let's base spiritual philosophy on an individual basis or not at all. I follow the Bible to the best of my abilities, and consider the only infallible Man to have been Jesus. I lack appreciation for religious diktat.
 
 
forgive the signature logorrhea . =)
It's part of your charm.
 
logorrhea
If you haven't yet seen (the brilliant documentary) Spellbound... run, don't walk, to the video store.
 
xo

152 posted on 03/08/2004 8:45:07 AM PST by AnnaZ (I hate Times New Roman... and it's all Mel Gibson's fault!)
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To: churchillbuff
Matthew in 10:34 quotes Jesus uncharacteristically telling his apostles: "Think not that I am come to send peace on earth: I came not to send peace, but a sword." You don't see that on Christmas cards and it's not in this film, but those words can be reinterpreted -- read today to mean that inner peace comes only after moral struggle.

That's not my core interpretation of the line at all. I think He was letting us know that He would be divisive when His full message is told. That's certainly how it is. Mention some vague notion of "God," and no one objects. Say the name "Jesus," and watch the reaction. And among some "Christians," it's fine as long as you stick to the Jesus-is-love tact, but point out that He also has a warrior persona, and watch the fireworks begin.

IMMHO, this divisiveness is the core element of what Jesus was foretelling in that verse.

MM

153 posted on 03/08/2004 8:58:32 AM PST by MississippiMan
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To: churchillbuff
Seems that this Passion controversey isnt developing along conservative-liberal lines as much as it is elitists versus people outside the Boston-NY-WAS corridor.

Safire cant say anything good about The Passion, because he'll lose all his liberal beltway cocktail party friends.

Meanwhile some liberals from outside the beltway like Ebert liked it.
154 posted on 03/08/2004 9:01:55 AM PST by raloxk
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To: churchillbuff
Beginning to see who is who out there. I didn't expect this from Safire. Usually he is clear headed EXCEPT on moral issues.
155 posted on 03/08/2004 9:05:29 AM PST by nmh (Intelligent people recognize Intelligent Design (God).)
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To: jwalsh07
I agree. Safire doesn't understand the movie at all. JEws tried to stand for Jesus at the trial and were thrown out. By far the most sympathetic characters of the movie, along with Christ, are the faithful Jewish women - Mary, MAry Magdalene, and the unidentified woman who gives Christ a cloth to wipe his face.
156 posted on 03/08/2004 9:06:06 AM PST by Zack Nguyen
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To: AnnaZ
Again ... I'm really sorry about the sloppy post.



=== This isn't a conversation you want to have with me.

Well, you might be (pleasantly) surprised, actually. I'm a sucker for just these sorts of conversations and suspect you'd be a lot more thought-provoking than some of the Usual Suspects of Freeper lore with whom I still have the occasional "conversation" until they toss the gameboard and stomp off, anyway.



=== Let's base spiritual philosophy on an individual basis or not at all. I follow the Bible to the best of my abilities, and consider the only infallible Man to have been Jesus.

Assuming "spiritual philosophy" is something like theology, I think you're just restating what I said was the Catholic position. Any man who truly strives for obedience to the truth he knows and loves has done all that can be asked of him. Thanks to proximity in time or place -- not to mentioned consciences wholly deformed by circumstance or conditioning -- not all men are in a position to receive, even, much less recognize and/or adhere to "self-evident" truth.

It's not for us to condemn them, that's all. This sort of judgment is reserved for the man's maker -- the only who truly knows the man's heart -- and is expressly forbidden to Catholics. That's all I was saying. It's just one reason it's so absurd anyone would think a Catholic film -- particularly one made by a "trad" like Gibson -- could possibly be conveying a message of condemnation or blame.

(Other than we all share but which is up to us to assign ... )




=== I lack appreciation for religious diktat.

Religion -- re ligare -- means to return to and bind or connect. Connecting man, returning him to his source and, in the process, connecting men as equally endowed with human dignity, purpose and -- in general -- being willed into being and sourced by that Creator.

I wouldn't be so quick to dismiss "religious diktat" when it's exactly that (as embodied in the Declaration's discussion of self-evident truths, for example) which affords us some objective truths by which to reconcile differing opinions or rightly interpret "rights" and other constitutional precepts.

As the current hub-bub over the word "marriage" is evidencing (long after the institution was basically defunct), I'm not sure we really want to cede to the Individual always the last word on what Is.

As Clinton would say, depends on your meaning of Is.

Chesterton speak of a "democracy of the dead" whereby the validity of tradition, faith and Common Sense are confirmed. C. S. Lewis in his "Abolition of Man" talks at length about how leftists generally exacerbate and exagerrate the differences among men when any survey of the Human Tao -- despite proximity in place or time -- reveals we have the essential in common always.

Sure, there are some decided "diktats" in Catholicism. We take Christ's use of "is" quite literally where the Last Supper is concerned. But we also make a point of recognizing those essentials we share with other faiths and pagans, even. And it's only in keeping those truths in mind always and reconciling all to those "self-evident" truths that real progress is made without any of the adulteration or amelioration of truth that generally accompanies most "progressive" or strictly personal takes on reality, both of which can be riddled with error but have no internal mechanism for righting same.

Much like our current legal system which -- in seeking to lower the bar always to accomodate whatever Lowest Common Denominator of personal opinion exists -- is suffocating us in some slapdash egalitarian nightmare of laws compounding laws compounding laws all of which are utterly devoid of anything like objective truth and cater always to the subjective.

As you probably already knew, I feel pretty strongly about this. So please forgive my sorta having the conversation you didn't want to have ... =) ... and don't worry about replying, particularly if you've better things to do.

(Which I know you have! I had so much fun after Mass yesterday whooping it up with three young brothers and falling in love with the Cheshire grin and brilliant blue eyes of their yet bald little seven-month-old baby sister. What larks! That girl's got it made. =)

You take care, Miss Anna.
157 posted on 03/08/2004 1:23:10 PM PST by Askel5
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