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The Gospel according to Neo: 'The Matrix' as a phenomenon shaping public opinion about religion
The Christian Science Monitor ^ | May 09, 2003 | Josh Burek

Posted on 05/08/2003 10:04:46 PM PDT by Destro

from the May 09, 2003 edition

METAPHYSICS, 'MATRIX' STYLE: Sci-fi fans, philosophers, Buddhists, and evangelical Christians are finding resonant themes in 'The Matrix.' The sequel, 'The Matrix Reloaded,' arrives in theaters May 15. WARNER BROS./AP

The Gospel according to Neo: Theologians and pop-culture experts see 'The Matrix' as a phenomenon shaping public opinion about religion

By Josh Burek | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor

In a film era long gone, the Bible was a major player. Charlton Heston and Jimmy Stewart starred in movies that directly drew on themes of Bible history and Christian redemption.

Hollywood treats religion a bit differently these days. Mel Gibson's "The Passion," aside, most A-list stars aren't lining up to play the carpenter from Nazareth. But some of Hollywood's most enduring science-fiction films have borrowed greatly from his story.

Casting Keanu Reeves as a Christlike figure in "The Matrix" trilogy may seem blasphemous, but it's not new. "Star Wars" didn't push the idea of a Jedi Jesus, but many fans felt that it freely mixed myth and religion. And some critics said "E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial" relied heavily on the account of Christ's passion - a suggestion that director Steven Spielberg, who is Jewish, rejected. More recent films, from "Signs" to "Contact" have used a sci-fi setting to discuss serious questions of faith.

But where previous films made vague references to the Christian story, "The Matrix," some theologians argue, appeals directly to the heart of Christian identity. Its script, however, draws on Platonic philosophy, Greek mythology, Buddhism, and postmodernism, religious experts say.

Its high-octane blend of comic-book action and lofty metaphysics fueled box-office sales in 1999 to more than $450 million worldwide. But it also created theological tension about the movie's symbolism. And with "The Matrix Reloaded" due out next week, the debate is likely to intensify over different interpretations of the trilogy.

"There's two ways to look at this from a Christian perspective," says Glenn Yeffeth, editor of the book "Taking the Red Pill: Science, Philosophy, and Religion in The Matrix." "One is that it's retelling the story of Christ," he says. "The other way to look at it is a very violent film filled with garden-variety blasphemy that exploits people's resonance with the Christian narrative to fool people into a story that is fundamentally atheistic."

Both sides see a movie phenomenon that, for better or worse, is shaping public thought about religion.

"The Matrix" is compelling people to examine the plurality of religions versus the unity of truth, says cultural critic Read Mercer Schuchardt. Like the movie's characters, who strive to understand what is real, Matrix fans are hoping the trilogy's second installment will help them unravel the film's tangled symbolism, say film experts.

Earnest effort to deconstruct the movie began with a question. On Superbowl Sunday 1999, "Matrix" filmmakers tantalized TV viewers with a commercial trailer that asked, "What is the Matrix?" After the film made its auspicious Easter debut, "Matrix" viewers began answering the clever marketing query in personal terms. Sci-fi fans, philosophers, Buddhists, and even evangelical Christians have found resonant themes in the story.

"There are hundreds of Matrix [websites] out there, and they're not about how cute Keanu Reeves looks," says Mr. Yeffeth. "The Christian parallels, the philosophical underpinnings - this is a movie that ... captures people's intellectual imagination."

Some observers, however, are skeptical about the film's ability to convey the profound. A number of critics panned the first "Matrix" for being too pretentious. And some viewers balked at the marriage of kung fu fight scenes with a "Philosophy for Dummies" script.

The film's creators, brothers Larry and Andy Wachowski, have been remarkably tight-lipped about their vision for the trilogy. But these comic-book aficionados have pulled back the curtain enough to reveal which levers they are pulling.

"We're interested in mythology, theology, and, to a certain extent, higher-level mathematics," Larry told Time in 1999. In a Warner Bros. Web chat that year, they were asked to what extent their allusions to myths and philosophy were intentional. "All of it," they said.

Like all myths, "The Matrix" is first and foremost a story. By day, Thomas Anderson (Reeves) is a cubicle-bound software programmer. By night, he's a computer hacker known as Neo with troubling questions about reality. A rebel group led by Morpheus recruits Neo and offers him a chance to discover the truth about the Matrix.

Neo is unplugged from the Matrix and realizes that humans are slaves to an empire of man-made, intelligent machines. The Matrix is a virtual-reality program hard-wired into the human brain to deceive mankind about this truth. Neo reluctantly accepts his mission to free the human race.

No one is seriously treating the script as a Neo-New Testament. But "The Matrix" story has stirred debate within the Christian community.

Author and dedicated Christian Kristenea LaVelle hoped her scriptural exegesis of the film, "The Reality Within the Matrix," would inspire Christians to apply the movie's gospel message to their own lives. Reaction to her book, however, has been mixed. A Canadian pastor contacted her to ask if he could use "The Matrix" as a keynote for evangelical outreach to teenagers. But she also encountered negative feedback at a book signing - in a Christian bookstore.

The film's bullet-laden violence and strong language, along with Eastern religious influences, she acknowledges, are unsettling to some Christians. But she has high hopes for the sequels. "If you can see a way through those things and really pick out the good stuff ... any Christian could apply those things to life and grow from it."

Mrs. LaVelle says that "The Matrix" expresses the basic idea of Christian salvation. "The whole idea of being 'awakened' or 'un-plugged' is a reference to salvation." She recognizes, however, that her view is not universally accepted.

David Frankfurter, for one, disagrees. "I'd resist the notion of [Neo] as having anything to do with Jesus," says the professor of history and religious studies at the University of New Hampshire. "He's the classic hero figure from early Jewish literature."

Mr. Frankfurter and other religious experts say "The Matrix" does not represent orthodox Christianity nearly as much as Gnostic Christianity.

Gnosticism never developed a well-defined theology, but it depicts Jesus as a hero figure who saves mankind through "gnosis," or esoteric knowledge. In the Gnostic philosophy, the physical world is not part of God's creation, but a manifestation of a lower god - a nightmarish reality that imprisons mankind, say religious experts. Gnostics believed they could achieve salvation, not by overcoming evil and sin with God's grace, but by learning the "higher knowledge" about reality.

Gnostic threads are present in many religious traditions, including Sufism and Buddhism. As woven by "The Matrix," these threads tie together current concerns with an ancient knot.

"All of this stuff has been bouncing around in the human brain for centuries. When it comes into this hip new iteration in the cyberworld, it all sounds familiar," says Robert Thompson, professor of television and popular culture at Syracuse University in New York.

Whereas the bestselling "Left Behind" book series about judgment day plays on orthodox Christian fears of an arrival of the Antichrist, some observers say "The Matrix" uses Gnostic concepts to convey an equally frightful - but perhaps more tangible - prospect: technology's domination over mankind.

The success of both, however, may be due to the seductive power of conspiracy theories.

"The 'Left Behind' series is working very neatly with deep cultural fears about organized conspiracy," Frankfurter says. "[In 'The Matrix'], you have the ultimate conspiracy. We are all battery cells that are imaging our lives. And it also just plugs in to the ultimate conspiracy fear: the fear of technology."

Matrix Glossary

Birth: When he is "unplugged" from the Matrix, Neo resembles a newborn. Once his "umbilical cords" are removed, we see that he is hairless, confused, and covered in a type of amniotic fluid. He falls down a long tube and into a pool of water. After this presumed baptism, he is carried up, with his limp body making a cross silhouette. Neo had to be "born again" before he could begin his mission.

Buddhism: The chief problem faced by humanity, according to Buddhist thought, is not sin or evil: it's ignorance of the true reality. The lack of an explicit divine being and references to "focus," "path," and "free your mind" also smack of Buddhist influence. Matrix rebels download truth and reprogram their minds to achieve salvation.

Cypher: The name of this traitor who excels at Matrix code means, according to Webster's Dictionary: Zero...a person or thing of no importance or identity...a system of secret writing based on a key. His character has many parallels to Judas. At one point he exclaims, "Whoa, Neo. You scared the bejeezus out of me."

Evil: Agent Smith tells Morpheus that the original Matrix world was "designed to be a perfect human world." No one accepted the program, he explains, because "human beings define their reality through misery and suffering." By drawing on parts of Genesis and comparing humans to a virus, Smith establishes evil as a natural, intrinsic state of human nature.

God: God does make a cameo in The Matrix only as an expletive from Trinity. Yet the word "miracle" is used in clear cases to signify the need - and reality - of divine intervention. But there's no implied sense of a covenant between God and man.

Jesus Christ: The name Jesus is often used in association with Neo, most explicitly when Choi, a drug user, thanks Neo for providing him with illicit software. "Hallelujah. You're my savior, man. My own personal Jesus Christ."

Matrix: Literally, a computer program used to imprison mankind. According to Webster's, "matrix" means: 1) orig., the womb; uterus 2) that within which, or within and from which, something originates, takes form, or develops. At its heart, The Matrix is a story about birth and creation.

Morpheus: Neo's mentor. Some observers identity him with John the Baptist, since both men were appointed to prepare the way for a messiah. In Greek mythology, Morpheus, the son of Hypnos, was the god of dreams.

Music: The final song, played by Rage Against The Machine, is "Wake Up."

Neo: The messiah. This is Thomas Anderson's virtual name. Literally meaning "new," Neo is also referred to as the "One," which is an anagram for Neo.

Nebuchadnezzar: Morpheus's ship. This figure referenced in the Book of Daniel was the powerful king of ancient Babylon who suffered from troubling dreams. The name literally means "Nebo, protect the crown."

Numerology: Neo's apartment number is 101, suggesting that he's "the one." Neo is shot in apartment number 303, and after 72 seconds (72 hours = 3 days), he rises again.

Phone calls: In keeping with prophetic tradition, Neo is "called" to his task, not by a burning bush, but a FedEx employee. Their brief exchange - "Thomas Anderson?" | "Yeah, that's me." - mirrors Bible language constructions used to signify special identity.

Postmodernism: Neo hides his illicit software within a chapter titled "On Nihilism" within a volume called "Simulacra and Simulation," by Jean Baudrillard. This seminal work of postmodernism advances the idea of a copy without an original. The Wachowski brothers assigned Keanu Reeves to read this book before filming began.

Thomas Anderson: The Apostle Thomas was also called Didymus, which in Greek means "twin" or "double." Anderson means "son of man," one of the titles Jesus uses for himself. The twin names suggest his dual nature. As "Mr. Anderson," he is vulnerable to the powers of the evil agents. As "Neo," he has dominion over them.

Trinity: Her kiss restores Neo from death. The doctrine of the three modes of God is central to Christian orthodoxy, yet the word "trinity" never actually appears in the Bible. Neo deepens the mystery of who Trinity is when he says to her, "I just thought, um...you were a guy."

Logos: The altered studio logo at the opening of the film may be highly significant. The Matrix-coded WB letters could simply be the Wachowski brothers thumbing their nose at the Warner Bros. But by altering the logo - from the Greek term "logos," for word - the film's opening does two things. First, it corrupts the Gospel of John, which begins with "In the beginning was the Word...". Second, it asserts that metaphysical meaning can be gleaned by mining deep into words, or code.

Zion: The last human city. In the Old Testament, Zion refers to the royal capital of David. Matrix agents desire the codes to Zion above all else.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; Free Republic; News/Current Events; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: catholiclist; faith; matrix; theology
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To: ffusco
Oh come on, those ads are great if you love pure dry humor.
21 posted on 05/08/2003 10:43:55 PM PDT by Paul C. Jesup
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To: Destro
Maybe the super intelligent machines will realize that life is meaningless without a soul and power off.

Hey!! That's from at least 2 Star Trek episodes!!!


Man, screw Neo! We need Captain Kirk to have a heart to heart with the Matrix. He's the only starship captain I know to talk machines into committing suicide!
22 posted on 05/08/2003 10:45:57 PM PDT by nospinzone (I like moderates. If I could, I'd give them half a vote.)
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To: Destro
Does 666 translate into binary?

1010011010... beware the UPC Mark of the Beast!

23 posted on 05/08/2003 10:47:01 PM PDT by Teacher317
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To: Teacher317
The commercial for 2 was just on and I got shivers.
24 posted on 05/08/2003 10:54:54 PM PDT by lurky
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To: WarSlut
Remember our "Zion" discussion about the Matrix? Read this.
25 posted on 05/08/2003 10:58:58 PM PDT by cgk (Liberal truisms are the useless children of hindsight.)
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To: Destro
The Matrix ? Thinly-disguised Gnostic dreck. I cannot fathom what it is about that awful film that people think is so great. The laughable premise? The ripped-off Hong Kong action scenes? The bong-hit, dorm-room-bull-session "philosophy" behind the story? Keanu Reeves' unique Zen acting style? What?

Envoy Magazine published a great article a couple of years ago detailing all the Gnostic propaganda in the film. I suggest giving it a read before waxing rhapsodic about the gospel ccrding to Neo.

The New Gnostic Gospel
By Steve Kellmeyer

Two women lead a young man into a dusty, poorly-lit room. The furnishings are simple: two chairs and a table. Near the table stands a dark-skinned man. The young man had prepared for, longed for, this meeting for quite some time. Finally, he was about to meet the man he had known only by legend and rumor. The darker man motions towards a chair and both take a seat at the table. The dark man begins. “You want to know the answers to your questions.” The younger man nods warily. “I can reveal them to you. Are you ready to learn?” The young man nods again. “The world has been pulled over your eyes to blind you from the truth. You are a slave, born into bondage, living in a dream world . . .”

As the speaker continues his revelations, the young man leans in close, drinking in every word.

Does this scenario seem vaguely familiar? If so, it may be that you’re reminded of a similar scene in the hit movie The Matrix. Yet this is not a clip from a Hollywood movie. Even though artificial reality, illusions and delusions, and the building of dream worlds lie at the very heart of the modern movie industry, Hollywood’s media moguls did not originate the ideas embodied in this scene. Thousands of years before motion picture technology existed, the idea of artificial reality, of a dream world built for men, informed the lives of thousands of men and women throughout the Near East and beyond. The scene above is a composite drawn from the experiences of those men and women, whose philosophy seriously threatened Christianity almost from her birth. Now Hollywood has imported this dangerously false view of the world into an increasing number of its movies, showing us what it looks like when it’s placed firmly into our time.

Remember when Hollywood produced wonderfully Catholic films such as The Bells of St. Mary? Times change. The wild success of the Star Wars series began a Hollywood trend in “alternative” theologies that has recently become quite sophisticated, most especially in the cult favorite The Matrix.

Such a trend may seem discouraging to those of us who lament the deepening religious confusion of our culture. Yet Catholic apologists who recognize the theological roots of a film such as The Matrix., and who appreciate the reasons for its popularity, can use such a movie as an intriguing springboard for discussion with non-Christians. Analyzing Hollywood’s aberrant theology allows us to contrast it with Catholic truth — and thus to clarify the Faith...

Complete Article

Philosophical question for fans of The Matrix: We know that The Matrix can create a virtual-reality environment of sufficient detail to fool any human being. With this in mind, how can Neo know for certain that the world into which he awakens after taking the red pill is truly the Real World and not just a computer-generated "honey trap" created by The Matrix to trap potential troublemakers?
26 posted on 05/08/2003 11:03:55 PM PDT by B-Chan (Catholic. Monarchist. Texan. Any questions?)
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To: Destro
"Latin was almost never used by the Romans in the eastern provinces." Correct those people of the Hellenic sphere of influence spoke Greek, but as a part of the empire, they were not Romans. They were Roman subjects and Romanization never took hold there.

Also it was legal to conduct any civic matter or legislation in Greek or Latin, as The Romans had turned Greece into a vast university system.


"Most Romans spoke Greek better than they did Latin".
The half -a-dozen Romance languages that exist seem to contradict that.
27 posted on 05/08/2003 11:05:12 PM PDT by ffusco (Maecilius Fuscus, Governor of Longovicium , Manchester, England. 238-244 AD)
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To: Destro
"Most Romans"? Perhaps the very elite, who had tutors, but the average legionary spoke lingua latina. That's why the French and Spanish and Roumanians speak Romance languages, not a Greek patois. "INRI" is a Latin abbreviation, by the way.
28 posted on 05/08/2003 11:06:16 PM PDT by maro
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To: Destro
I was waiting for you to call me on that!

V'ger, Nomad....
29 posted on 05/08/2003 11:06:33 PM PDT by ffusco (Maecilius Fuscus, Governor of Longovicium , Manchester, England. 238-244 AD)
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To: Destro
Could the anti-Christ be the anti-man? Does 666 translate into binary? Am I making this up as I go along? You bet!

Another branch of thought.

IIRC, a proposed method for demonstrating the existence of many worlds (i.e., a vast number of "parallel" universes a la Everett quantum mechanics), which obviates the need for God as an explanation for the existence of our finely-tuned universe, consists of a quantum mechanical observance that can only be done by a conscious, intelligent supermachine.

But would such a machine have a soul? Would such a machine be "possessable" in the traditional sense of evil spirits? Could such a machine ever therefore be trusted? By humanists? Probably. By traditional Christians? AntiChrist.

Another branch of thought: Existence of many worlds, plus Vingean singularity ==> deity or deities.

Are universes traversable by a deity?

So if no many-worlds scenario, our finely-tuned universe ==> God.

If many-worlds, and Vingean singularity (which appears, at first glance at least, almost inevitable) ==> God, or god(s) of some type.

30 posted on 05/08/2003 11:06:57 PM PDT by Luke Skyfreeper
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To: Destro
Well, if 666 is decimal, it would be 29A in hex, which, in binary, would be 0010 1001 1010. If 666 is hex or octal, it would be 0110 0110 0110 or 110 110 110.
31 posted on 05/08/2003 11:08:31 PM PDT by I_dmc
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To: Destro; RLK; All
Go HERE.
32 posted on 05/08/2003 11:08:47 PM PDT by Jeff Chandler (This tagline has been banned.)
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To: maro; Destro
Senex Macdonaldus habebat fundum, EIEIO
  Et in ille fundum habebat porces, EIEIO
  Cum oink oink hic, oink oink hoc
  Oink hic, oink hoc, ubique oink oink
  Senex Macdonaldus habebat fundum, EIEIO

  Senex Macdonaldus habebat fundum, EIEIO
  Et in ille fundum habebat boves, EIEIO
  Cum moo moo hic, moo moo hoc
  Moo hic, moo hoc, ubique moo moo
  Senex Macdonaldus habebat fundum, EIEIO

  Senex Macdonaldus habebat fundum, EIEIO
  Et in ille fundum habebat oves, EIEIO
  Cum baa baa hic, baa baa hoc
  Baa hic, baa hoc, ubique baa baa
  Senex Macdonaldus habebat fundum, EIEIO

  Senex Macdonaldus habebat fundum, EIEIO
  Et in ille fundum habebat anates, EIEIO
  Cum quack quack hic, quack quack hoc
  Quack hic, quack hoc, ubique quack quack
  Senex Macdonaldus habebat fundum, EIEIO
33 posted on 05/08/2003 11:09:30 PM PDT by ffusco (Maecilius Fuscus, Governor of Longovicium , Manchester, England. 238-244 AD)
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To: ffusco
wouldn't that be "in illo fundo"? Or even better, "illo fundo." Cheers.
34 posted on 05/08/2003 11:15:52 PM PDT by maro
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To: Destro
String about 300 questions together, and you have the script for an episode of "In Search of..."
35 posted on 05/08/2003 11:17:48 PM PDT by Arthur McGowan
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To: Jeff Chandler
I've come to the clonclusion a person is lucky to write three pieces like that in a lifetime. I don't know whether I would have the capacity to write that piece today.
36 posted on 05/08/2003 11:18:04 PM PDT by RLK
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To: I_dmc
Well, if 666 is decimal, it would be 29A in hex, which, in binary, would be 0010 1001 1010. If 666 is hex or octal, it would be 0110 0110 0110 or 110 110 110.

"There are 10 kinds of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't."

- Unknown

37 posted on 05/08/2003 11:20:18 PM PDT by Vince Ferrer
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To: Destro
The Matrix was a great flick but it aint no religious revelation. . .you will have to wait for the third movie in the fall for divine revelation guys.
38 posted on 05/08/2003 11:20:28 PM PDT by Maynerd
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To: B-Chan
Philosophical question for fans of The Matrix: We know that The Matrix can create a virtual-reality environment of sufficient detail to fool any human being. With this in mind, how can Neo know for certain that the world into which he awakens after taking the red pill is truly the Real World and not just a computer-generated "honey trap" created by The Matrix to trap potential troublemakers?

I wondered about this too. At the end of the first movie, Neo is basically all powerful within the Matrix or so it seems. He killed an Agent (never done by any human before) after surviving a whole magazine of gunshots to his chest at point blank range. I think we will find it was a trap of some sort, or that the Agents have gotten even smarter since the first film.
39 posted on 05/08/2003 11:21:25 PM PDT by frosty snowman
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To: RLK
clonclusion = conclusion
40 posted on 05/08/2003 11:21:47 PM PDT by RLK
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