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Dear Friends,
Since a number of people have asked for my take
on Mel Gibson's movie, The Passion of the Christ, let me
give just a few thoughts that might be helpful to some of you. Take
them for what they are worth.
I must admit that I went to the movie with strong
prejudice, largely because of Gibson's Neanderthal version of Catholic
Christianity, and his similar politics. I figured it would have
no redeeming insight or quality. I attended with a group of fellow
friars, and came away touched by some scenes, and even awestruck
by others, although I think it largely came from a lifetime of meditation
on Jesus and personal love of Jesus. I was prepared to fill in the
gaps. How could a movie about him not prompt deep response and sentiment?
Specifically, I have hopes that the movie can give
images of unconditional love and a redemptive quality to suffering
that our world barely understands anymore, and deeply desires. It
also has that "whomp on the side of the head" quality
that it takes to get young peoples' attention, and particularly
to get male attention. It could well start some people on a serious
Jesus journey or spiritual search, even by some of the confusing
questions that it raises. This is excellent, and the Spirit will
surely use the movie for good.
Negatively, I agree with those who say the movie
is almost entirely one-dimensional. It is about suffering pure and
simple, as if Jesus was just born to suffer. He has no other message.
There is no plausible "why?" to his suffering, and no
connection with his teaching, his social or religious critique,
his prophetic vision. Any true drama needs character development
and not just spectacle. Aristotle said that spectacle was a cheap
substitute for true drama, and it would drown out any in-depth message.
I believe that is what happens here.
It ends up being a message of Divine will power
instead of the much more needed messages of human vulnerability,
human solidarity, and human compassion. Jesus for me is the quintessential
human, a God given prototype of the human problem and solution,
more than a religious version of Atlas or Prometheus. Gibson's version
of Jesus is closer to a Hollywood superhero or Greek god than to
the Biblical version of the "son of man." Although again,
I admit, it can still lead people to the human Jesus, but I am just
afraid that the Divine heroics will cancel out the human.
As many of you know, I am a strong proponent of
the Franciscan understanding of the redemption, based on the teaching
of Blessed John Duns Scotus in the 13th century. He did not believe
in any "substitutionary atonement theory" of the cross:
Jesus did not have to die to make God love us, he was paying no
debt, he was changing no Divine mind. Jesus was only given to change
our mind about the nature of God! (Imagine what we are saying about
the Father, if he needed blood from his son to decide to love us!
It is an incoherent world with no organic union between Creator
and creature. No wonder so few Christians have gone on the mystical
path of love, since God is basically untrustworthy and more than
a little dangerous.)
For Duns Scotus, Jesus was the "image of the
invisible God" who revealed to us a God's eternal suffering
love for humanity, in an iconic form that we could not forget. He
was not "necessary," but a pure gift. The suffering was simply
to open our hearts, not to open God's - which was always open. Unfortunately,
the movie is entirely based on the old atonement theory that suffering
was needed, the more suffering the better, and the most suffering
the best of all. Unfortunately, it has been the mainline tradition,
and has been made into dogma by evangelical Christians. It creates
a mercantile Christianity with God as the major debt collector,
when what Jesus came to offer was a mystical Christianity with God
as the "bridegroom." It might take these graphic images of suffering
love to break through some peoples' consciousness, but I am afraid
it will largely be true for people who do not think too much.
Because once you start thinking, the whole thing falls apart. The
movie does not appeal to the whole person. Emotions are not bad,
however, and can serve as a catharsis and an opening. They might
be God's way into the soul - and our way out of ourselves. But eventually,
the message must compel head, heart, and gut, and lead to an honest
image of God, the world, and ourselves.
Maybe the success of the movie reveals our own
lack of wholeness, or even any desire for the whole picture. Maybe
we don't want to put religion and life together. Maybe we don't
want our spirituality to have any social or political implications.
Maybe we like parts more than wholes. And surely good parts are
very good, as long as we do not allow them to become substitutes
for and deflections from the whole picture, which is the very definition
of the Holy.
Richard Rohr, OFM
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