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The
jury seems to be in. The
Passion is a well-mounted, beautifully shot melodrama,
well-acted and deftly directed. It’s impressive and powerful enough
to warrant much of the hubbub around it. And director Mel Gibson
was nothing if not gutsy in laying out his own money to make a
religious film in an extinct language.
But it turns
out this vividly violent movie is not so much about theology or
faith or any Christian message. It’s about makeup. It’s about
special effects. It revels in the spectacle of cruelty and torment.
The violence is an end in itself, in the same way crashing cars
or exploding spacecraft are in other movies. You come to marvel
at the ability of filmmakers to appall you with flailed flesh
and splattered blood. Real showmanship. But the impact comes only
from the violence, not the message. Watching any film character
endure such abuse would be as disturbing.
It could
have been Frodo Baggins. It didn’t have to be the son of
God.
All of which
has raised a controversy over what this movie is really about.
It seems to be pretty much a one-note song. With no backstory,
the purpose for all this is largely lost. It’s like watching the
trial and execution of a black man for whistling at a white woman
without explaining the Jim Crow South. It’s all consequence and
no cause, as if we’re only seeing the film’s third act.
It’s
a skillful indulgence by the filmmakers in cinematic sadism. This
isn’t a new tactic for director Mel Gibson. Watching the final
sequence of Braveheart, you can almost see a dress-rehearsal
for The Passion. But this film goes much further, dragging
us through every agonizing step from conviction to crucifixion
– beyond what is necessary to make the point, and way beyond anything
found in the Bible.
Which brings
us to the question, is all this violence accurate to scripture?
Well, think of it as “scripture-plus.” In all four Gospels, the
abuse of Jesus is summed up in about a dozen words. He was “mocked,”
“spat upon,” struck in the head with a reed,” and “scourged” (whipped
or severely punished.) Then came the crown of thorns. That’s it.
Two sentences, max. Everything beyond that is Mel Gibson’s speculation
and embellishment.
Gibson allegedly
comes from a Catholic sect that emphasizes the suffering of Christ
to pay for our sins. It’s a tradition that blossomed in medieval
Spain and is carried on today in many Latin American sects. Visit
a church altar south of the border and chances are you’ll see
a Jesus dripping with blood, rather than the sanitized icon we
see in the States. But even there the haemoglobin count is low.
The exhausting, relentless, near-pornographic gore and cruelty
in The Passion are Gibson’s vision – not the picture painted
by Mark, Matthew, Luke or John.
There’s also
been much gnashing of teeth over whether or not the movie is anti-Semitic.
It certainly paints an ugly portrait of Jerusalem’s high priests,
the Pharisees and the Sanhedrin, who are the driving force behind
Christ’s execution. But those who have a problem with this aspect
of the film must also have a problem with scripture. According
to all four Gospels, the onus was indeed on the high priests,
or at least some of them – as the film acknowledges. It was they
who pressed Pilate to silence the upstart preacher. The book of
Matthew goes even further, having the crowd exclaim, “His blood
be on us and on our children.” It’s a line for which Jews have
paid an awful price, and which was mercifully deleted from the
movie’s subtitles (although it remains, strangely, in the Aramaic
dialogue).
Unfortunately,
zealots and bigots grasped at these straws to flog those they
disliked. So, belief in blaming “the Jews” was persistent for
many centuries. It’s the antique notion of collective guilt. And
images in The Passion, like an androgynous Satan drifting
invisibly amid the Sanhedrin (not in scripture) do make Gibson’s
motives a tad suspect. It’s as if the priests were doing Satan’s
work, when it was God who presumably scripted these events. Hence,
those predisposed to using the film to reaffirm their bigotry
can do so. But nobody else is likely to take up torches and pitchforks.
Of course,
you can’t rightly make Christ’s story anti-Semitic. Jesus himself
was a Semite, and a Jew. His teachings were not of an alien faith
seeking to conquer Judaism. Quite the contrary. He quoted the
Commandments and the Hebrew prophets of old, and claimed his own
coming was the fulfillment of Jewish prophecy. Nor can you entirely
blame the Jewish priests for being outraged by this. Here was
an obscure preacher in a deeply devout culture posing as the Messiah,
and suggesting the current crop of religious leaders were sinners
and hypocrites. If an Imam in Afghanistan made such claims under
the Taliban, he would have been stoned to death in the streets.
And who knows what would happen if you laid this on Pat Roberston?
But the Gospels
were not authored by cool-headed historians. They were written
by later evangelists with a clear agenda. Since the Vatican II
Council (which Christopher Hitchens claims Gibson’s faith rejects),
the Catholic Church insists you can’t blame people today for actions
taken centuries ago. Secularists also regard this as immoral and
a bit insane. The sins of the fathers should not be visited upon
the son (except maybe in the case of George Bush). An angry Jewish
lynch mob may be part of the Passover plot, but that was then.
To
be fair, the film is also pretty tough on the Romans. Hollywood
has never been kind to the people who established our legal traditions
and introduced ideas like “The Rule of Law” and “The Rights of
Man.” They’re forever cast as proto-Nazis of a sort, perpetually
oppressive, barbarian and cruel. Small wonder, since the only
people making movies these days are Christians and Jews, both
of whom have ancient axes to grind. Even non-religious movies
like Gladiator concentrate on their most corrupt leaders
and brutal pastimes. It’s as if a thousand years from now the
North Vietnamese became the dominant makers of movies and the
only vision of Americans they portrayed was as warriors and football
players. (Sounds a lot like Fox News.) The politically acceptable
thing to do in that case, is to give the pagan soldiers the job
of savaging Jesus.
But ruthless
as they could be, the Romans were also the great civilizing force
of the age. They were more tolerant of local religious beliefs
than any other empire of the era. First century Rome was a roiling
stew of competing religions and cults. Jews constituted about
10% of the empire. And like California in the ‘70s, self-styled
Svengalis routinely popped up with a smorgasbord of teachings
and followers. Just as New Age gurus fused the traditional beliefs
in God with Free Love or Eastern mysticism, many first century
cults threw everything from Jewish theology to Greek philosophy
into the mix.
It was over
this polyglot of beliefs that the Romans reigned. Their interest
was not religion. It was law and order. Pay your taxes and observe
the laws, and there’d be no trouble. But in The Passion,
the Romans delight in torturing Jesus as if it were personal.
As if this was their idea. Sure, they mocked and beat him; that
was their job. But the personal contempt and the endless cruelty
in the film are not illustrated in scripture.
About
the only one in the movie who doesn’t come off like a barbarian
is Pontius Pilate, the Roman governor of Judea. There’s been much
carping over the fact that he’s portrayed in the film as a waffling
softy on the Jesus issue. But in the Gospels he repeatedly says,
“I find no crime in this man,” and he refuses to condemn the maverick
preacher even after Jesus says to his face, ”You would have no
power over me unless it had been given you from above…” (John
19:11). Them’s fighting words to a Roman governor. Yet, he never
concluded that Jesus deserved crucifixion.
Pilate was
in fact a thug. Even Emperor Tiberius (who knew what he was talking
about) warned him about his brutality, and ultimately called him
to account. But the Gospels make it clear that Pilate wanted nothing
to do with the Jesus matter, and his instinct was to set him free.
Part of the story’s point is that even a hanging judge like Pilate,
who was never shy about crucifying enemies of Rome, found no guilt
in Jesus. This is why, when forced to placate the mob lest he
invite a riot (and hence the Emperor’s wrath), he literally “washes
his hands” of the matter and lets the mob decide Christ’s fate.
This is fairly rendered in the film.
Christ’s
revolution was a religious one, not a political one, and therefore
no threat to Rome. In fact, Jesus was an early advocate of church-state
separation (which may have upset the Pharisees then as much as
it does fundamentalists today). When asked if Jews should pay
taxes to Rome, he famously answered, “Render therefore unto Caesar
that which is Caesar’s, and unto God that which is God’s.” (Matthew
22:21) Meaning, yes – pay up. He never advocated the violent overthrow
of Rome. In fact, he admonished the insurrectionist Barabbas about
this, and claimed those who lived by the sword would die by the
sword. But without the Roman sadists, there’d be no one to mete
out the extended cruelty that is The Passion’s stock in
trade.
All this
is red meat for religious firebrands who regard themselves as
persecuted truth-bearers in a secular world. And this is one of
the reasons fundamentalists have flocked around the film. As with
Right–to-Life activists who hold up ghastly abortion photos in
public, the shock value here is “God’s own will,” if you believe
it promotes the faith. Do this in the name of anything else and
you’re corrupting the culture.
The
rage and debate over this movie will likely continue as the film
travels to other cultures, many of which will react in a way that
will make our hissy-fits look civil and nuanced by comparison.
Sadly, a little of Christ’s teaching, which is sorely lacking
in the film, would be of use here. The one ray of philosophical
light that does come through in the movie is his admonition that
you should love your enemies and forgive those who persecute you.
That’s a message few in this debate seem willing to practice.
Still, the power of the film is undeniable. It has the power to
make Christian fundamentalists take 10-year-olds to the most sadistic
movie of the year. It has the power to make liberals complain
about excessive violence on screen. Most ironic of all, it has
the power to send a message that even its creator didn’t intend:
that Christianity is a faith born of blood and human sacrifice
as much as any of its pagan predecessors. Now let’s see… a creator
whose creation gets entirely out of hand and doesn’t do what he
intends. Where have I heard that one before?
You know,
it might make a good movie.
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