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The big five losers from 'The Passion'
Jerusalem Post ^ | 3.10.04

Posted on 03/10/2004 2:42:00 PM PST by ambrose

The big five losers from 'The Passion'

SHMULEY BOTEACH Mar. 10, 2004

Rather than being a wild triumph for Christianity, The Passion of the Christ has created a long list of losers. Here are the top five:

1. Christian conservatives whose ability to protest violence in Hollywood films has now been severely compromised.

The Christian community in the US earned my abiding respect for serving as the foremost guardians of the morality of the American nation. There are literally hundreds of Christian organizations in the US devoted to enforcing standards of decency in Hollywood, strengthening marriage, and teaching young teens to abstain from sex rather than use a condom.

But the Christian community's enthusiasm for The Passion has dealt a catastrophic blow to its credibility in condemning violence in films and squalid video games such as Grand Theft Auto. Gibson's movie is one of the most brutal and bloody in the history of film and rivals The Texas Chainsaw Massacre for sheer gore.

No doubt my Christian brethren would argue that the violence in The Passion is warranted, given the fact that the subject matter is religiously inspiring. But I predict that Hollywood directors famous for gratuitous violence, such as Quentin Tarantino and Oliver Stone, will now find convincing arguments that violence in their films also serves an important social purpose.

2. Mel Gibson, who emerges as a talented fanatic at best and a full-blown loon at worst.

Yes, I know, every commentator has painted Mel as the big winner in this brouhaha since his Aramaic movie defied all expectations and so far earned him a cool $200 million. But money is not everything, and Mel must now contend with his new reputation as a violence-obsessed religious fanatic who said that all Protestants, including his own wife, are destined for hell, who claimed that the Holy Ghost helped him direct his film, and who has a Holocaust-denying anti-Semitic dad to boot.

Mel's violent streak has also been much in evidence. As New York Times columnist Frank Rich writes, "If he says that he wants you killed, he wants your intestines 'on a stick' and he wants to kill your dog - such was his fatwa against me in September - not only is there nothing personal about it but it's an act of love."

When the hoopla is over and Mel is searching for a new project, he'll be hard-pressed to find another controversial biblical story that guarantees controversy and profit. After all, you really can't much improve on the charge that the Jews killed God.

3. Jewish conservatives, many of whom now feel alienated from their Christian colleagues and are wondering who are their authentic allies. The Passion has forced upon politically conservative Jews like myself a horrible choice: either betray Jewish interests by pretending that a movie making the charge of deicide is no big deal and playing sycophant to the much larger Christian market by praising the film - a choice all too many high-profile Jewish conservatives have made; or be told that you are endangering Israel by undermining Christian support for the Jewish state.

But I reject the choice between the interests of the Jewish people versus the interests of the Jewish state. Any Christian friend whose support can so quickly evaporate when we object to being falsely portrayed as god-killers in a movie is hardly an ally.

PASSIONATE ADMIRERS of the Christian community, like myself, now feel distant from and disillusioned by our Christian counterparts. Where is Christian sensitivity to an allegation that has led to the death of millions of Jews throughout the ages?

I have been attacked by Franklin Graham on US television for opposing this film. His father Billy, one of America's finest sons and its foremost evangelist, has - for all his greatness - labeled Jews "devilish" in a secretly taped conversation with Richard Nixon.

If such an educated man can develop a negative view of Jews based on the gospel's depiction of Jewish culpability for the death of Christ, what conclusions will the less educated draw as they are shocked by the bloody images of Jews demanding the crucifixion of Jesus? 4. Jews for Jesus.

I have thrice debated leading Jewish-Christian missionary Dr. Michael Brown on the messiahship and death of Jesus. People like my friend Mike must now defend a deeply anti-Semitic film that portrays his own people as devilish murderers who crucified the Creator, thus giving the lie to Jewish-Christian's central argument that believing in Jesus is not a betrayal of the Jewish people. 5. The Christian faith.

The biggest loser of all, tragically, is the Christian religion, which is now portrayed as a religion of blood, gore, and death rather than of blessing, love, and life.

Judaism and its daughter religion, Christianity, were a radical departure from the pagan world's earlier cults of death. Both emphasized the idea of righteous action on this earth and both were based on the Hebrew scriptures' demand for moral excellence and the need to perfect the world in God's name. Even in the New Testament, the passion of Christ occupies at most a chapter or two in each of the gospels, while the life of Jesus is spelled out more than 10 times that number.

But Mel Gibson, in his wearisome, monotonous, and numbing depiction of endless blood and gore, utterly ignores things like Jesus's beautiful ethical teachings from the Sermon on the Mount, focusing entirely on the horrors of the crucifixion.

Gibson tells us that what made Jesus special was not that he lived righteously but that he died bloodily. Mel Gibson - who told interviewers that he contemplated suicide before making this film - is clearly obsessed with violence and death.

The Passion is an evangelical tool. Is that really Christianity's central message - not that Jesus lived an inspirational life by which the faithful should be roused but that he died a horrible death for which the sinners should feel responsible? Indeed, the only winners emerging from The Passion are Islamic extremists who will no doubt take pleasure in seeing Jews and Christians squabbling at a time of considerable danger to both Israel and the United States.

But rather than blame the Jews for simply defending themselves against Mel Gibson's attack, let's place the blame squarely where it belongs - on Mel Gibson, who could easily have made an inspirational movie about the life and death of Christ without blaming the Jews for Jesus's death and without mixing in enough blood to fill the Jordan River. Instead, he decided to protect his investment by courting controversy and has made hundreds of millions of dollars.

Will he put some of that money toward educating Jews and Christians about their common heritage and kinship? Only time will tell. And in that telling, we will better be able to gauge Mel's motives and sincerity.

The writer is a nationally syndicated talk radio host in the US and author of 14 books.


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To: ambrose
REFERRING TO THE AUTHOR OF THE ARTICLE.
161 posted on 03/10/2004 9:32:44 PM PST by Quix (Choose this day whom U will serve: Shrillery & demonic goons or The King of Kings and Lord of Lords)
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To: ambrose
Is that really Christianity's central message - not that Jesus lived an inspirational life by which the faithful should be roused but that he died a horrible death for which the sinners should feel responsible?

Uh...yes.

162 posted on 03/10/2004 9:33:59 PM PST by mafree
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To: mafree
Uh...yes.

It's not like it was a secret for 2000 years, why do so many seem so surprised?

163 posted on 03/10/2004 9:37:27 PM PST by hellinahandcart
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To: ambrose
Pan Yans wife is correct. Right after Jacko Sickos arrest he was all over TV defending Jackson. He said he would be comfortable leaving his own kids in Jackson's care. I saw him on Fox and MSNBC. He was labled as a spiritual advisor of Jackson.
164 posted on 03/10/2004 9:49:03 PM PST by SusanTK
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To: sarasmom
Is not the entire point of the apocropal second coming of Christ not meant to "save" the souls of God's beloved Jews?

I think you may mean "apocalyptic", not "apocryphal". But no, the second coming is not all about the Jews. It's about the resurrection of the dead, and a final ordering of all creation into what will be saved and what lost. The Apocalypse tells us that Jesus will come as Bridegroom to his spouse, the Church, of whom Israel is only the prototype. I'm sure Jesus has great love for the Jews, but they do not enjoy any privileged guarantee of salvation in the Christian economy. Whether observant Jews will receive Jesus as Messiah at the Second Coming is an interesting question. No doubt some will. But as the image and likeness of God, man retains free will at all times, including the freedom to choose for Christ or against him. No one will be saved against his will.

165 posted on 03/10/2004 10:15:34 PM PST by Romulus ("Behold, I make all things new")
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To: PeoplesRep_of_LA
Character judgment is apparently not his strong suit. I'm not terribly concerned about what he thinks of Mel Gibson, you know? The more we know about Boteach, the better Gibson looks.
166 posted on 03/10/2004 11:34:42 PM PST by DaughterOfAnIwoJimaVet ("Lashing out" at Democrats since 1990.)
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To: Snuffington
It takes a staggering amount of ego-centrism to ignore Christian understanding of the Christian faith, and focus solely on what it means to Jews. News-flash: American Christians don't have pogroms against the Jews. The suggestion that viewing this movie is going to lead them to it is simultaneously a stupid reading of history, and a thumb in the eye of modern Christians.

It's very insightful to see people like Mr. Boteach equating American Christians with proto-Nazis, which is essentially what this critique amounts to. In his eyes, we're a couple of propagandistic movies away from lighting the ovens of our own Auschwitz. Nice to know what your "passionate admirers" truly think about you.

Eloquently stated.

167 posted on 03/11/2004 12:02:38 AM PST by DaughterOfAnIwoJimaVet ("Lashing out" at Democrats since 1990.)
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To: Romulus
The Apocalypse tells us that Jesus will come as Bridegroom to his spouse, the Church, of whom Israel is only the prototype.

"Israel is only the prototype?"

Scriptural documentation, please.


168 posted on 03/11/2004 12:10:18 AM PST by Sabertooth (Malcontent for Bush - 2004!)
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To: Steve Eisenberg
Steve, Christians who blame the Jews for Christs' death are wrong, imho. This death was pre-ordained according to scripture with sins of mankind being responsible. The Christians are the Jews greatest ally, because our Savior was a Jew. Forgive me for a simple-minded reply, but that's the way I feel in my heart.
169 posted on 03/11/2004 5:56:31 AM PST by Dawgreg (Happiness is not having what you want, but wanting what you have.)
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To: NutCrackerBoy
"Can we sit here and guarantee to every Jew on the planet that nothing could bring back that evil? Or a different, perhaps more insidious, evil?"

Well, no. Evil is waiting in the wings, ready to pounce, "when good men do nothing."

One thought I have long entertained: I think it is not enough to denounce Nazism, etc. People have long asked, how could something like that happen in a civilized country like Germany? SOME have blamed ALL Germans for it, the innocent as well as the guilty. An easy way to project the accommodation of evil away from the self, and onto "those other guys, over there." The point is, the accommodation to evil is not a peculiarly or particularly "German thing." The point is, the heart of man is the same, and great evil COULD happen elsewhere. (Stalin, Mao, etc. come to mind).

That is not to say that accommodation to evil would necessarily take the same form: an anti-Jewish pogrom, for example. For one thing, people's antennae are up for something like that -- as many reviews of the Passion demonstrate! ;)

I appreciate your logical conclusion that a pogrom is not likely in the US. I agree. And the more closely people follow Christ's message, the LESS likely it will be, and the less likely the acceptance of other evils will be.

170 posted on 03/11/2004 6:21:17 AM PST by AMDG&BVMH
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To: BrooklynGOP
It's a little bit insulting when "enlightened" Jews like Rabbi Boteach try to get us to focus on the ministry of Christ, as if that is why He came here. The sermons and the miracles are, of course, important, but Christians do not worship Jesus because He walked on water. Other guys have claimed to have done this. We worship Christ because we believe that he was the Son of God, who died for our sins.

I'm not saying that you have to accept our beliefs, but if the Rabbi wants to participate in the dialogue, he needs to have a clearer understanding of exactly what it is the we believe, and he needs to respect that belief. Otherwise his opinions appear self-serving.
171 posted on 03/11/2004 7:16:07 AM PST by presidio9 ("By extending the reach of trade, we foster prosperity and the habits of liberty." -Adam Smith)
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To: feinswinesuksass
No, we all killed him.

Inevitably someone says this to me in this discussion. Yes, I understand that "we all killed him". That is the symbolic meaning of his death. I get it.

But it is useful (because otherwise confusion abounds) to separate that symbolic meaning of his death from the physical act of his death. All of these discussions over who killed Jesus are analyzing the physical act, not the symbolic meaning, so your comment here is irrelevant. And who committed the physical act(s) which contributed to or caused Jesus's death?

Some Romans along with some Jews, 2000 years ago, all of whom are now dead. Like I said.

172 posted on 03/11/2004 8:30:13 AM PST by Dr. Frank fan
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To: ambrose
The biggest losers are those who were predicting that if the movie was released, Jews would be rounded up, loaded up in boxcars and shipped off to the ovens by rabid Christians.

Okay, it's hyperbole, but so were the pre-release statements from numerous sources.
173 posted on 03/11/2004 9:08:53 AM PST by hattend
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To: ambrose
1. Christian conservatives whose ability to protest violence in Hollywood films has now been severely compromised.

The Christian community in the US earned my abiding respect for serving as the foremost guardians of the morality of the American nation. There are literally hundreds of Christian organizations in the US devoted to enforcing standards of decency in Hollywood, strengthening marriage, and teaching young teens to abstain from sex rather than use a condom.

But the Christian community's enthusiasm for The Passion has dealt a catastrophic blow to its credibility in condemning violence in films and squalid video games such as Grand Theft Auto. Gibson's movie is one of the most brutal and bloody in the history of film and rivals The Texas Chainsaw Massacre for sheer gore.

No doubt my Christian brethren would argue that the violence in The Passion is warranted, given the fact that the subject matter is religiously inspiring. But I predict that Hollywood directors famous for gratuitous violence, such as Quentin Tarantino and Oliver Stone, will now find convincing arguments that violence in their films also serves an important social purpose.

I wonder if the author protested against the violence in Schindler's List when it was released?

It isn't hard to understand that movies like Schindler's List and The Passion aren't entertainment--they are serious films for adults that deal with ugly, violent issues. They in no way supply justification for violence-as-entertainment nor does approval of them somehow weaken the credibility of those that call for a much needed clean up the trash that gets offered as "entertainment" by Hollywood.

[z]
174 posted on 03/11/2004 10:05:55 AM PST by zechariah ("Sir", they said, "We would like to see Jesus.")
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To: 68skylark
Seems to me that other movie makers are now going to push the same boundaries, with motives that are FAR less pure than the makers of this movie. I'm not arguing that the movie shouldn't have been made -- but it DOES seem like a legitimate concern anyway.

Personally, I think movies like Schindler's List and The Passion are in a completely seperate class from movies that portray violence as entertainment. Schindler's List and The Passion are not entertainment. They are hard, serious films that deal with hard, serious issues and I think they have a legitimate place in our society. (I think we could use a good film adaptation of Solzhenitzyn's Archipelago Gulag too--it would probably include the passage from the book where the testicles of male "suspects" are stepped on and crushed by the "investigator".)

At the same time, I think you are probably right that some people will attempt to use graphic nature of serious films as an excuse to present violence and immorality as entertainment.

Even so, I think we need films like Schindler's List and The Passion.

[z]
175 posted on 03/11/2004 10:23:20 AM PST by zechariah ("Sir", they said, "We would like to see Jesus.")
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To: af_vet_1981
Schmuly Boteach is FRIENDS with Michael Jackson, not just a movie mate about a brother......BIG difference!!
176 posted on 03/11/2004 10:53:07 AM PST by Ann Archy (Abortion: The Human Sacrifice to the god of Convenience.)
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To: Ann Archy
Has President Bush ever referred to Democrats as his friends ?
177 posted on 03/11/2004 10:57:32 AM PST by af_vet_1981
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To: 68skylark
Movie violence in re Passion--

I think yours a reasonable observation. Gibson did not try to avoid the R-rating, and frankly said that it deserved it.

As someone not from a Catholic background, but with an interest in art, it was quite shocking to me (as a child) the medieval and renaissance artwork I would come across in the hefty volumes found in public libraries--the Ecstacy of St. Teresa, and the Martyrdom of St. Gerome (hope I got his name right, the one always shown bristling with arrows). This artwork was made and displayed in church property for the education of an otherwise illiterate public.

It was surely hard to take, R-rated art, but I came to accept it as part of a tradition of graphic portrayal of martyrdom.

I believe the Passion very much in that tradition--I thought about those works of art when I watched the movie.

Different, but not exactly what I'd call gratuitous. Not that I don't enjoy a "blowed-em-up" action movie now and then, but this is quite a thing apart.

178 posted on 03/11/2004 11:04:59 AM PST by Mamzelle
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To: Texas2step
"Unbelieveable. No further comment."

It is sad, but I get the strong impression that many Jews embrace anti-semitism like a protective cloak, in that they see it everywhere, in everyone and everything. For such folks, it justifies their existence, as they see themselves as the perpetual victim, and the need to convince themselves on a daily basis that they are victims. That is so sad for a people with such a great history, and a great tradition. Thank God there are many Jews who do not subscribe to such a sad constitution, because the world needs their strength of character in these trying times.
179 posted on 03/11/2004 11:06:16 AM PST by ought-six
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To: ought-six
Yes, unfortunately, talking about antisemitism passes for religion for a lot of liberal Jews.
180 posted on 03/11/2004 12:27:13 PM PST by presidio9 (the left is turning antisemitism into the new homophobia)
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