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.
The many Jews who took joy in the film are not necessarily to be praised above the ones who felt hurt by it. Don't gloss over the divide. We will still be friends across the divide.
Christians (and Jews) should really be concerned with this man of Gods's opinion.
This is what these sociopaths miss... Jesus DIED for all of us. He sacrificed himself as an offering for our sins. The Old Testament doesn't foretell Jesus's ministry, His healings, or His compassion, it foretells His horrible, bloody death at the hands of those He came to save.
Was Jesus special because He taught the Law? No. Moses and the prophets taught the Law also. Yes, even the part about loving God with all you heart, soul, strength and mind and your neighbor as yourself. This wasn't something new.
Was Jesus special because of His miracles? No. Moses and the prophets performed the same miracles... healed, raised the dead. One even went so far as to stop time itself.
God could have sent any prophet to DO what Jesus DID and SAY what Jesus SAID in His ministry. In fact, He had repeatedly done just that in the past.
ONLY JESUS COULD DO WHAT HE DID ON THAT CROSS TO ACCOMPLISH WHAT HE ACCOMPLISHED.
Hardly what I'd call "reasoned analysis". Sounds like Boteach is getting overly emotional.
Also, see #32. Doesn't add much to his credibility...
And why is it that these detractors feel it appropriate repeatedly to attack people for the sins of their fathers? Haven't they, ahem, read the Bible?
I hope those who have seen The Passion and value it will not allow him to bait you to anger with his caustic rhetoric in this article.
I guess not but who on earth made this "charge"? I haven't heard Mel Gibson make it.
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
And what movie would that be? If The Passion, against whom is this "charge" made?
or be told that you are endangering Israel by undermining Christian support for the Jewish state.
This is one of the few things surrounding this stupid controversy to which it will be a pleasure to reply:
Mr. Boteach, you can say anything you like about Mel Gibson's movie The Passion of the Christ, criticize it, claim erroneously that it "charges deicide" against "the Jews", claim that it stole your gal, claim that it started the great Chicago fire, etc., and guess what? There is no way that you are endangering Israel by undermining Christian support for the Jewish state. Anyone who says so is just plain wrong and is underestimating Christians IMHO; Christian support for the Jewish state is rock-solid - even more so than Jewish support, in many cases - and is not dependent on whether or not you or any other Jew praises Mel Gibson's movie. I'm tempted to be insulted at the underestimation of Christians involved in making this claim (that their support for Israel will vanish if Jews publicly dislike Mel Gibson's movie), but the fact is, I'm only amused. It's truly funny that anyone would think such a thing. :)
Any Christian friend whose support can so quickly evaporate....
He's on the right track. What he's missing is that there are too few such people to matter.
when we object to being falsely portrayed as god-killers
What the heck is he talking about here? "we"? Was Mr. Boteach portrayed as a god-killer in Mel Gibson's movie?
Where is Christian sensitivity to an allegation that has led to the death of millions of Jews throughout the ages?
Where is Mr. Boteach's intellectual ability to determine whether, in fact, that allegation has actually been made in the Mel Gibson film?
what conclusions will the less educated draw as they are shocked by the bloody images of Jews demanding the crucifixion of Jesus?
Us dumb country bumpkins will see images of a small number of individuals doing something in a movie and think "Jews. Them's Jews. That there's what all Jews is like."
People like my friend Mike must now defend a deeply anti-Semitic film
What film would that be?
that portrays his own people as devilish murderers who crucified the Creator
Doesn't the film portray some, like, Roman soldiers crucifying Jesus, or something?
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.
Uh well, after all, that is what the movie is about, the blood and gore stuff (it is called "The Passion..." after all, not "The Beautiful Ethical Teachings Of The Christ"). Similarly his earlier movie We Were Soldiers, which was about the Vietnam War, utterly ignored the 1906 San Francisco Earthquake.
Gibson tells us that what made Jesus special was not that he lived righteously but that he died bloodily.
I haven't heard Gibson say this. Cite? I imagine most Christians would say that what made Jesus "special" was that he was the "Son of God" and proved it by coming back to life. I'd be shocked indeed if Gibson were to say anything else.
The Passion is an evangelical tool.
Silly me I thought it was a movie.
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?
Actually, I do believe that is *closer* to being Christianity's central message than that whole "inspirational life" thing, yes. But not because this is what Mel Gibson's movie is about, per se.
A person can choose (for whatever reason) to make a movie about a Christian theme and that doesn't necessarily mean that the subject of the movie is the "central message" of Christianity.
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.
Well if that's what he thinks then why is he adding to Islamic extremists' pleasure by whining about a movie?
But rather than blame the Jews for simply defending themselves against Mel Gibson's attack,
1. I'm not blaming "the Jews", I'm blaming individuals like Mr. Boteach here. 2. "the Jews" need no "defending" from Mel Gibson. Because 3. there was no "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
Yes, he could have. He could have chosen to make a movie about a wide array of different things. He chose to make this movie.
without blaming the Jews for Jesus's death
I'm still not sure what movie Mr. Boteach thinks does this...
Will he put some of that money toward educating Jews and Christians about their common heritage and kinship?
1. Us dumb Christians don't know about our common kinship with Jews?
2. I find myself wondering what Mr. Boteach would think of a Mel Gibson-funded program to "educate Jews about the common kinship they have with Christians". Somehow I don't think he'd think too highly of it. Isn't it likely that it's only the Christians he wants to be "educated" with Mel Gibson's money?
I have a hard time understanding the tone of articles like this. Obviously Mr. Boteach is desperately searching for "losers from 'The Passion'", so much so that I wonder who he's trying to convince.
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