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National Catholic Reporter - The anti-Christian 'Passion of the Christ'
National Catholic Reporter ^ | March 19, 2004 | TOM BEAUDOIN

Posted on 03/18/2004 9:56:22 AM PST by Stone Mountain

National Catholic Reporter
The Independent Newsweekly
Issue Date: March 19, 2004

Passion stirs passion

Even before it opened, Mel Gibson?s movie ?The Passion of the Christ? was controversial, with some claiming the movie was anti-Semitic or could fuel latent anti-Semitism. The controversy has not been put to rest with the movie?s opening. In their discussion of the historical truth of the Gospels, the movie?s portrait of Christ and Christianity and the charge of anti-Semitism, these writers (Miller, Beaudoin and Tapia) reflect some of the divergent responses the movie has occasioned. -- Margot Patterson, opinion editor

The anti-Christian 'Passion of the Christ'

By TOM BEAUDOIN

Of all the opinions proffered regarding Mel Gibson?s movie ?The Passion of the Christ,? no one to my knowledge has named one of the most biting offenses and ironic qualities of the film: It is not a Christian movie. Why?

? Depictions of Jesus that claim to represent the historical Jesus of Nazareth, but that minimize his Jewishness by an exaggerated separation from his ethnic-religious context cannot be called Christian. Christian faith holds that Jesus as Christian Messiah was born, raised, lived and died a Jewish man.

The movie sets Jesus against Jews by way of appeal to stereotypical depictions of Jews, whether in the form of an appalling fade-out/fade-in shot from a profile of the apostle Peter?s hooked nose to a profile of the high priest Caiaphas? nose; or in the guise of bloodthirsty, Jesus-hating Jewish clerics. None of the primary Jewish characters on the ?good side? in the movie (Jesus or his mother, for example) are portrayed with any easily identifiable ?Jewish? characteristics, such as the prayer shawls that identify most of the Jews on the ?bad side.?

This dichotomy removes Jesus from his own religious family, threatening to make him simply a cipher from nowhere, a universal ?holy man? -- a muting of Jesus? particularity.

? Depictions of Jesus that treat his suffering as the singular triumph of a spiritual hero cannot be called Christian. Christian faith holds that Jesus experienced the same banality of evil and terror that many political prisoners of his day underwent, and that in this way God shared humanly in the unjust sufferings experienced in everyday human life.

The movie over-individualizes the violence done to Jesus, to the point of making a sick fetish of it. By so relentlessly depicting the scourging, the dehydration, the nails driven into hands and feet, the crowning with thorns, and all manner of physical abuse against Jesus, he is made into a new kind of action hero.

He is not an action hero like Arnold Schwarzenegger or Mel Gibson himself, but, paradoxically, a heroic action antihero. Jesus takes center stage as action hero by being the drenched center of excessive violence. Although Jesus does not physically fight back (despite a brief demonstration that he can take it like a man by picking himself up during his scourging), he becomes the heroic antihero by out-divining everyone else. He is beaten to a pulp, but no one can possibly match him in terms of his divinity.

For example, he speaks flawless Latin when addressed by Pilate; he maintains a serene equanimity throughout, cushioned by scenes of him offering gnomic scriptural sayings while bathed in soft light; the heavens and earth literally shake and tremble when he dies, and the ?bad Jews? get their punishment when their own Temple falls apart; the devil is seen confronting and tempting Jesus, and only Jesus, throughout; and most oddly of all, the devil taunts Jesus at the beginning by saying that no one has it within him to take on the iniquity of the world and save all souls -- addressing Jesus from the start as a superhuman being, as an action hero in the making.

Gibson?s Jesus sheds more light on us than on the Passion. His Christ could only ascend to this heroic action antihero status in a culture where we neither encounter nor take responsibility for our own violence. If we Americans regularly saw, for example, the bloodied corpses of Iraqi women and children, or American soldiers? mangled bodies in the papers and on television, this film would not have the same shocking and exclusivizing hold on our imaginations that it does. Brutal physical violence would be more immediately connected to real pain, to authentic devastation, and to our own complicit tolerance for a faraway war on the condition that we are not drafted and are not told how much of our tax money pays for each Iraqi civilian death.

In this way, ?The Passion? also over-individualizes the Christian message by portraying violence against Jesus himself as a central concern of Christian faith, separating this violence from violence in our own lives today. At the showing I attended in Boston, people were eating popcorn, drinking Cokes and Icees, and eating pretzels, while we all sat in comfortable cushioned reclining chairs during the mayhem. The movie further over-individualizes Christianity by divorcing Jesus? crucifixion from other crucifixions, as if his were utterly unique, as if he were the only one to suffer such intense and humiliating violence. In this way, we are kept from seeing the banality of his death as something suffered by thousands of other political prisoners in his day.

For these reasons, ?The Passion? cannot be called a Christian film. Moreover, if these depictions of Jesus are taken by viewers to be accurate representations of the meaning and message of Jesus, then the movie is functionally anti-Christian. It is anti-Christian insofar as the overfixation on violence against Jesus provides a dramatic and persuasive escape hatch from the more complicated and demanding witness of the Gospels: that a man whose intimacy with God reverberated through changed relationships that threatened the religious and political powers of his day, and that our own intimacy with God may demand no less.

If the movie is used as an escape from this Gospel demand, we may well imagine that Jesus is sitting with his popcorn and Coke, watching the movie next to us, crying like so many of us in the theater, but for a different reason, as he silently says, ?Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they are doing.?

Tom Beaudoin is visiting assistant professor of theology at Boston College, and the author of Consuming Faith: Integrating Who We Are With What We Buy (Sheed and Ward).

National Catholic Reporter, March 19, 2004


TOPICS: Current Events
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1 posted on 03/18/2004 9:56:23 AM PST by Stone Mountain
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To: Stone Mountain
I suppose St. Bridget of Sweden and countless generations of Catholics meditating on the "overindividualized" passion of Christ were anti-Christian.
2 posted on 03/18/2004 9:58:51 AM PST by Unam Sanctam
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To: Stone Mountain
Moved to Religion - so much for this thread...
3 posted on 03/18/2004 9:59:46 AM PST by Stone Mountain
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To: heyheyhey
National anti-Catholic Reporter strikes again.
4 posted on 03/18/2004 10:01:20 AM PST by NeoCaveman (Hey John F'in. Kerry, why the long face?)
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To: Stone Mountain
This article isn't Christian.
5 posted on 03/18/2004 10:03:25 AM PST by Sloth (We cannot defeat foreign enemies of the Constitution if we yield to the domestic ones.)
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To: Stone Mountain
Tom Beaudoin is visiting assistant professor of theology at Boston College,

BC ain't Catholic anymore. It's a Call To Action chapter with a football team.

6 posted on 03/18/2004 10:04:31 AM PST by NeoCaveman (Hey John F'in. Kerry, why the long face?)
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To: Stone Mountain
Your# 3.......LOL

Moved to Religion - so much for this thread...

LOL.....

Sovereignty all around protection!

LOL

:-)

Maranatha!!

7 posted on 03/18/2004 10:06:50 AM PST by maestro
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To: Unam Sanctam
Well, the only "Christians" who count for these people are themselves and their friends and allies--including Dem politicians. Believe me, I've seen the corrosive effects of this mentality on liberal Catholic friends. Our own pastor, for example, vetoed a request from the Senior Citizens club to see the film as a group. Of course, as I pointed out to some people who were spouting the NCR line, most believing Christians (including Catholics) have seen the film or plan to see it, so staying away just keeps the elitists from any meaningful involvement in the discussion the movie is stirring up.
8 posted on 03/18/2004 10:08:11 AM PST by madprof98
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To: madprof98
...so staying away just keeps the elitists from any meaningful involvement in the discussion the movie is stirring up.

I wonder if it gets lonely in the ivory tower.
9 posted on 03/18/2004 10:24:34 AM PST by Desdemona (Music Librarian and provider of cucumber sandwiches, TTGC Ladies' Auxiliary. Hats required.)
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Comment #10 Removed by Moderator

To: Salve Regina
What the Passion haters REALLY object to is the reality that was Crucifixion. How many of us could have lived through that? It doesn't jive with the touchy feely world the liberals have concocted.
11 posted on 03/18/2004 10:38:43 AM PST by Desdemona (Music Librarian and provider of cucumber sandwiches, TTGC Ladies' Auxiliary. Hats required.)
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To: Stone Mountain
This is a most profound development… An apostate newspaper, which by its name falsely asserts its Catholicism, now attacks orthdox faith as “Anti-Christian.”
12 posted on 03/18/2004 10:43:42 AM PST by dangus
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To: Stone Mountain; heyheyhey
Don't be fooled. This fish-wrap is about as "catholic" as "catholics" for Free Choice.

The Anti-Catholicism of the National "Catholic" Reporter
13 posted on 03/18/2004 10:47:13 AM PST by Antoninus (Federal Marriage Amendment NOW!)
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To: dubyaismypresident
BC ain't Catholic anymore. It's a Call To Action chapter with a football team.

Aw, heck, not is BC not Catholic anymore, it's not even in the BIG EAST anymore... At least Georgetown and Notre Dame are stil play roundball with the Big East! Go choke on Gatorade, BC!
14 posted on 03/18/2004 10:47:35 AM PST by dangus
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To: dangus
"not is BC" = "not only is BC"
15 posted on 03/18/2004 10:48:15 AM PST by dangus
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To: Stone Mountain
>>If we Americans regularly saw, for example, the bloodied corpses of Iraqi women and children, or American soldiers? mangled bodies in the papers and on television, this film would not have the same shocking and exclusivizing hold on our imaginations that it does. Brutal physical violence would be more immediately connected to real pain, to authentic devastation, and to our own complicit tolerance for a faraway war on the condition that we are not drafted and are not told how much of our tax money pays for each Iraqi civilian death. <<

O, I see... REAL Christians side with Hussein and Bin Laden!
16 posted on 03/18/2004 10:50:30 AM PST by dangus
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To: dubyaismypresident
The National Catholic Reporter is a much superior and less left-wing Catholic paper.
17 posted on 03/18/2004 11:15:36 AM PST by ardara
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To: Stone Mountain
Gibson's Jesus sheds more light on us than on the Passion.

The one true thing you wrote Tom.

In this way, The Passion also over-individualizes the Christian message by portraying violence against Jesus himself as a central concern of Christian faith, separating this violence from violence in our own lives today.

Only a Professor could say something both so profoundly arrogant AND stupid at the same time.

Moreover, if these depictions of Jesus are taken by viewers to be accurate representations of the meaning and message of Jesus, then the movie is functionally anti-Christian.

Yeah right anti-Catholic Reporter, every single thing I've read this pathetic paper writes is hatefully against this movie. Unfortunately for these bitter little revisionist 5th Columnists, Rome has embraced it.


18 posted on 03/18/2004 11:28:02 AM PST by PeoplesRep_of_LA (I am no longer afraid to publicly say I love Jesus, thanks Mel)
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To: dubyaismypresident
BC ain't Catholic anymore. It's a Call To Action chapter with a football team.

Great way to put it. Notre Dame is the same thing, with a bad football team.

19 posted on 03/18/2004 11:35:04 AM PST by PeoplesRep_of_LA (I am no longer afraid to publicly say I love Jesus, thanks Mel)
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To: PeoplesRep_of_LA
Great way to put it. Notre Dame is the same thing, with a bad football team.

ND is so awful, I'm even MORE disappointed in it's theology department than in it's awful football team.

Bad football? Could it be a chastisement from God? Maybe.

20 posted on 03/18/2004 12:42:44 PM PST by NeoCaveman (Hey John F'in. Kerry, why the long face?)
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