Posted on 12/30/2012 6:56:10 PM PST by Bratch
The groundbreaking new film adaptation of the Broadway musical "Les Misérables" features desperate people suffering under soul-shattering unemployment, naive university students decrying the rich and stoking the flames of socialist revolution, unyielding government official interested not in right and wrong but in following his government's rules and one heroic individual who follows his faith in God to guide him from one success to another all the while truly helping others by using his own private wealth rather than through the ineffective and neglectful government.
In short, it is the perfect allegory for Americans living in the Age of Obama.
In 1987 when "Les Miz" opened in New York, many liberal columnists and critics tried desperately to make a connection between the 19th century Victor Hugo story and Ronald Reagan's America. The best they could do was show pictures of homeless in New York and juxtapose them with the desperate characters in the play who I've on the streets of Paris. The comparisons never held water in a macro way considering Americans in the late 1980s enjoyed prosperity across most economic classes. Now that the film is premiering in Barack Obama's America, it's remarkable how the comparisons are much more appropriate.
(Excerpt) Read more at breitbart.com ...
He was also someone who recognized the depth of his own sin, his need for forgiveness and grace. The movie does not sufficiently record, as does the book, the ongoing dilemma of being a fallen human being, prone to sin, regardless of his repeated efforts to establish a new and reputable life.
Javert chose death by suicide as preferable to having to face any more of Valjean's abominations.
Javert is like the older brother in Jesus' parable of the prodigal son, angry that his reprobate younger brother is welcomed back into the family by his father. Javert knew only the justice of God, and little of his mercy. He could not understand how Valjean, the one you describe as "a pervert, a thief and a guy who swam in raw sewage," could prosper under a just God. But Valjean knew who he was and despite repeated failures, at heart he humbly accepted Christ's sacrifice on the Cross as the payment for his own sin.
Swimming in raw sewage is an apt metaphor for humanity. As the apostle Paul explained, even the best of what we do is like "filthy rags," and of his own not inconsiderable accomplishments as one who faithfully served The Law, he considered it all "dung" (Phil 3:8).
Javert could not bring himself to accept that same grace, because he saw himself as righteous through the performance of his duties under the law. And when he did recognize his failure on this account, he could only imagine death and shame as the only outcome. That is the mindset of the Pharisee. It is extraordinarily bleak and it is a only a pale, bloodless imitation of God's true justice. It may well be, as you put it "the social glue which provided whatever stability existed in French society," but it is not a glue that will hold for eternity.
The Law brings death and the Spirit brings life. (2 Cor 3:6)The same grace granted to Valjean was available to Javert (as it is available to all of us), and had he accepted that, he would have most certainly had much to live for.
Not bad, not bad at all. You seem to have a knack for this sort of thing.
I enjoyed the movie. ;-)
Thx. I do get wound up sometimes. ;-)
Thx. I do get wound up sometimes. ;-)
Well, i’m proud to have been able to provoke you. ;-)
I absolutely hated this movie. Looooooooooooong and depressing.
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