Posted on 12/04/2006 7:52:47 PM PST by Pyro7480
'The Nativity Story' Movie Problematic for Catholics, "Unsuitable" for Young Children
By John-Henry Westen
NEW YORK, December 4, 2006 (LifeSiteNews.com) - A review of New Line Cinema's The Nativity story by Fr. Angelo Mary Geiger of the Franciscans of the Immaculate in the United States, points out that the film, which opened December 1, misinterprets scripture from a Catholic perspective.
While Fr. Geiger admits that he found the film is "in general, to be a pious and reverential presentation of the Christmas mystery." He adds however, that "not only does the movie get the Virgin Birth wrong, it thoroughly Protestantizes its portrayal of Our Lady."
In Isaiah 7:14 the Bible predicts the coming of the Messiah saying: "Therefore the Lord himself shall give you a sign. Behold a virgin shall conceive, and bear a son, and his name shall be called Emmanuel." Fr. Geiger, in an video blog post, explains that the Catholic Church has taught for over 2000 years that the referenced Scripture showed that Mary would not only conceive the child miraculously, but would give birth to the child miraculously - keeping her physical virginity intact during the birth.
The film, he suggests, in portraying a natural, painful birth of Christ, thus denies the truth of the virginal and miraculous birth of Christ, which, he notes, the Fathers of the Church compared to light passing through glass without breaking it. Fr. Geiger quoted the fourth century St. Augustine on the matter saying. "That same power which brought the body of the young man through closed doors, brought the body of the infant forth from the inviolate womb of the mother."
Fr. Geiger contrasts The Nativity Story with The Passion of the Christ, noting that with the latter, Catholics and Protestants could agree to support it. He suggests, however, that the latter is "a virtual coup against Catholic Mariology".
The characterization of Mary further debases her as Fr. Geiger relates in his review. "Mary in The Nativity lacks depth and stature, and becomes the subject of a treatment on teenage psychology."
Beyond the non-miraculous birth, the biggest let-down for Catholics comes from Director Catherine Hardwicke's own words. Hardwicke explains her rationale in an interview: "We wanted her [Mary] to feel accessible to a young teenager, so she wouldn't seem so far away from their life that it had no meaning for them. I wanted them to see Mary as a girl, as a teenager at first, not perfectly pious from the very first moment. So you see Mary going through stuff with her parents where they say, 'You're going to marry this guy, and these are the rules you have to follow.' Her father is telling her that she's not to have sex with Joseph for a year-and Joseph is standing right there."
Comments Fr. Geiger, "it is rather disconcerting to see Our Blessed Mother portrayed with 'attitude;' asserting herself in a rather anachronistic rebellion against an arranged marriage, choosing her words carefully with her parents, and posing meaningful silences toward those who do not understand her."
Fr. Geiger adds that the film also contains "an overly graphic scene of St. Elizabeth giving birth," which is "just not suitable, in my opinion, for young children to view."
Despite its flaws Fr. Geiger, after viewing the film, also has some good things to say about it. "Today, one must commend any sincere attempt to put Christ back into Christmas, and this film is certainly one of them," he says. "The Nativity Story in no way compares to the masterpiece which is The Passion of the Christ, but it is at least sincere, untainted by cynicism, and a worthy effort by Hollywood to end the prejudice against Christianity in the public square."
And, in addition to a good portrait of St. Joseph, the film offers "at least one cinematic and spiritual triumph" in portraying the Visitation of Mary to St. Elizabeth. "Although the Magnificat is relegated to a kind of epilogue at the movie's end, the meeting between Mary and Elizabeth is otherwise faithful to the scriptures and quite poignant. In a separate scene, the two women experience the concurrent movement of their children in utero and share deeply in each other's joy. I can't think of another piece of celluloid that illustrates the dignity of the unborn child better than this."
See Fr. Geiger's full review here:
http://airmaria.com/
When God created everything, He made it perfect. Now you are telling me that in order for his perfect plan to play itself out perfectly, God needed to introduce imperfection?
Better yet, professional religious rationalizers are telling me that God actually allowed it, get this for the greater good!
Now, what can be greater good than God's perfect creation? Is the tragedy of Lucifer's pride necessary to make God's perfect creation a "greater good?" or is human disobedience, preordained by God, a mark of perfection?
Is God dying on the Cross to free us from the bondage of death we bondage pf death we brought on ourselves a necessity even god has to submit to in order for us to return to the very pristine state of creation we were in to begin with?
Kosta: Did Lucifer really have a "free choice" in his "rebellion" or was it something that, as FK says, God said must happen?
FK: In all honesty, I don't know how to answer that. I don't know how grace works with angels. All I can say is that Lucifer's fall was just as predestined as man's. No surprises to God, and God always gets what He wants
So then God wanted a sinful man. He gave man a pristine home and then trapped him and threw him out?!
As for grace and angelic creatures, there is no redemption for the fallen angels. Their sins are higher because they are not temptations of the flesh but of envy and pride.
Yet the Bible tells us that God prepared hell for satan and his angels. So, if all this was predestined, God is not only the God of life but of death as well.
That's not Christianity, FK.
Oh, I was just joking, you know. You are right, of course, and your friends were blessed. Incidentally, I don't think Luficer was anywhere near ... the people were cleansed by the rigorous Lent of passions, and their inquities washed with tears of the Great (Holy) Week, and the Paschal Eucharist. Luficer was out of a job on that day!
Lime stone is rather soft, don't you think? :)
FK: Really? I've never heard that. Do you have a reference?
Of course.
From the Jewish Newsgroups FAQs. It's as good as dozens of others.
Precisely so.
The Tomus of 1285 (Finally available in English translation online, here!) Forcefully and constructively engaged Western ideas on the procession of the Holy Spirit, condemning the double procession, and the formula 'as from one source' of Lyons, but admitting an eternal manifestation of the Spirit through the Son (not merely the economical manifesation through the Son upheld by St. Photius).
Papadakis, in his scholarly exposition of the unionist controversy that lead to the issuing of the Tomus, argues that the Tomus laid the intellectual groundwork for the resolution of the Palamite controversies, which again involved interaction with Western ideas--the rationalism of Barlaam of Calabria, who was condemned by the Palamite Synods, but ended his life as a Cardinal of the Church of Rome.
The importance of the Palamite doctrine of the Uncreated Divine Energies to the praxis of monastics and to the Orthodox understanding of salvation as theosis is almost impossible to overstate. The monastic clergy were certainly among the leaders in the resistance to Florence, certainly in part because Florence in no way back-tracked on the rejection of the doctrine implicit in the welcoming of the anti-Palamite arch-heretic, Barlaam into the Church of Rome and his elevation to the rank of Cardinal.
The one hiearch who attended Florence/Ferrar, but did not accept the False Union, St. Mark of Ephesus, very much shows a keen appreciation for the Latin deviations from Holy Tradition in his Refutations of the Latin Chapters Concerning Purgatorial Fire. I see no reason to think that the lower clergy or the educated laity would have had less of an appreciation.
Please remember that Schroeder is a Jewish Physicist, so his insights will come from a different aspect than yours or mine.
Also God has given us a lot of "wiggle room" in understanding some Scriptures, particularly prophesy and Creation.
My personal epistemology - how I know what I know and how certain I am that I actually know it - is simply this: my most certain sources for knowledge are the revelations of God the Father in 1) the Person of Jesus Christ, 2) the indwelling Holy Spirit, 3) Scripture and 4) Creation.
Every other source for information is cast in uncertainty including my own sensory perception and reasoning - and those of my correspondents. I do not value even my own hearing and sight by comparison to the revelations of God the Father. If what I see does not comport with what He said, then it is my sight that is in error, not His words.
Thus I do not value my musings - or those of others - anywhere close to the revelations of God.
So for me, geocentricity was a musing that turned out wrong. Young earth creationism is a musing. Dispensationalism is a musing. Day-age interpretation of Genesis is a musing. And so on.
If however I have a leaning in the Spirit one way or another, I'm happy to say so. That Genesis 1 and 2 are speaking of creation of both the spiritual and physical realms is one such leaning. Scriptural evidence includes the tree of life which is in the middle of the Garden of Eden (Gen 2) and also Paradise (Rev 2.) Likewise, in Gen 2 God declares that He created the seeds before they were in the earth. Genesis 1:1 and Colossians 1 speak to the creation of heaven and earth, spiritual and physical.
That a thousand years is as a day to God also rings very true in the Spirit in the interpretation given at post 8311. IOW, it is not a poetic term but a very specific time table for Adamic man, he has a total of 7,000 years and the last 1,000 is the Sabbath, Christ's millenium reign on earth. On the Christian interpretation of the amount of time the Jews were exiled to Babylon, Christ is due any time now. But there is an approximate 250 year difference with the Jewish interpretation; their calendar is at year 5767.
Then again only God the Father knows the day and hour. Either way, Maranatha, Jesus!
The bottom line is that each of us will develop an understanding of Creation and prophesy in Scripture as the Spirit leads us whether directly or through trusted religious leaders.
The only recommendation I have for you in your seeking is to take a little time to meditate on your own epistemology to determine in advance how much weight you will be giving to the various sources of knowledge.
Yes, we have our differing viewpoints but all either point TO the truth or AWAY from it. I come from a sceptical scientific viewpoint because I know the devil is a trickster who leads many a believer astray. For instance : my own national presbyterian church just voted to go with the homosexual perverts.
After 50 years in that church : deacon, choir singer....I'm GONE; not going there again. They made their bargain with the devil, now let them live with it.
People either GRASP the bible as their linus security blanket or reject it out of hand as fairy tales for children. I look at it for scientific gems of wisdom.
Take for example the statement : "And the morning stars sang together"(in JOB I think), what does THAT mean? Well, LO and BEHOLD : astronomy(the hubble telescope and other 'scopes)has looked to the very dawn of the universe some 13.7 billion years ago. The COBE mission shows the almost uniform distribution of the 2.73 deg K background radiation and yet galaxies started much earlier than expected(quasars and black holes).
So, what came between the BIG BANG/radiation-matter decoupling era at 300,000 years and about 1 billion years and the first galaxies? It's a real poser. The only model that fits is a first generation of massive stars(100 to 500 solar masses)that quickly formed, burned, and went supernova within 50 million years or less.
Thus they seeded the gas/dust with heavier elements(beyond H and He) and the shock waves thereof created the "soap bubble" texture we see in galactic structure today.
The point? Higher intelligence gives us a phrase, a clue; but only later does SCIENCE learn : AHA, that's what they meant : a first generation of massive supernovae that blew up at almost the same cosmic instant("sang").
There's another clue : Gen 2:6; what does that mean? I know the answer. It has to do with the formation of the earth-moon system, but could you guess what it is?
Are there mistakes, wild, implausible numbers in the bible? Of course there are. Remember, the old testament was written BY old jews for young jews, not YOU. If 600,000 MEN went with moses into the desert, with women and children, that's around 2.4 MILLION people. That's probably as many or more people than were living in all of egypt at the time.
Obviously an inflated number. Or the 25,000 main men of Israel that attended a royal dinner by King David, another inflated number. Or the city of GOD. A league is 1/8th of a mile. An object 12,000 leagues by 12,000 leagues in area = 1500 miles by 1500 miles, HALF the diameter of the moon.
As a pyramidal form(half of an octahedron), the base center would be about 145 miles below the curved surface of the earth, well within the HOT mantle. Obviously an outlandish-sized object to SIT on the earth. Try 12 leagues by 12 leagues = 1.5 miles by 1.5 miles = a rational size.
Then GOLD from the planet mercury. By the TEDF theory it should have a high percentage of AU79. Then robots, computers and Wa-La a city of GOLD made without hands.
See, science and religion don't have to be at odds with each other, just different ways of arriving at the TRUTH.
Here's a test for you : is that JESUS on the shroud of Turin? Yes or no....
That aside, isn't it interesting the working of the Holy Spirit. There it was,1965, the year Vatican Two closed. And all around it seemed that radical revolution was in the air. And, unnoticed by the world, at the Pontifical Oriental Institute, the Holy Spirit was quietly at work in the minds and hearts of great men capable of great things.
Doesn't it make you appreciate with wondrous gratitude that right now,in some obscure,unknown part of the world, in the hearts and minds of men unnoticed and unknown by the world,how it is ineluctable reality that the Holy Spirit is working with cooperative wills to silently and successfully revivify our Church.
Our Church and Faith is not dying. It is ever being revivified and renewed by great men cooperating with the Holy Spirit.
That truth alone is bracing enough so that we ought never despair. We have won. We are winning. We will always win. Our enemies have lost. Our enemies are losing. Our enemies will always lose.
And the good altar boy need not be present for it to work this way since the efficaciousness was deemed to be in the sacrament rather than the person administering the sacrament.
I was trying to set up a situation where the priest was vicious and there was a congregation of "virtuous" people. The altar boy wasn't there to make the consecration happen. The priest is, ceteris paribus, all we need for the consecration. The question is the range of the effect of the insufficient intention of the priest. If Leo the whatever can say Anglican orders are invalid because of defective intention, then, we are coming close, but without crossing the line, to saying the worthiness of the minister affects the validity of the Sacraments.
If one party to a marriage clearly demonstrates (but NOT to the other party) that he is only getting married because it might get him a spot on American Idol, there is no marriage, and the other party loses.
So if one party to a sacrament, Hitler the celebrant, has a potentially deficient intention, we can see how it might affect another party. So what if Alexander the luxurious has a deficient intention when he ordains. (I'm trying to do your work for you.)
Most of the time, though, Catholics just froth at the mouth when one says Luther. All Catholics? The majority of Catholics? Cahtolic Academics?
This would go better if we could stay on track. Am I just supposed to absorb this blow and ignore it, or what. Shall I say,"Most Protestants monomaniacally foam at the mouth as a matter of principle?" so that we can be "even"?
In any case, foaming at the mouth has nothing to do with it. I'm angry at Luther, if it comes to that, but we weren't talking about my anger but about 'where the "esse" of Church is'. And since evidently the thesis needs to be restated every few minutes, I still think the plene esse is to be found in the Institutions of the RCC and the EO, and, assuredly a lesser esse among other ecclesial assemblies where baptism in the name of the Trinity is performed.
But the works are the effect and not the cause of being saved. As a former Protestant, I'm sure you recognize that well.
WHY do we have to do this? I recognize that as a current Catholic even MORE than I did as a Protestant. I think I have a richer and deeper understanding of what that means and of how it's true, and how ecen so feeble attempt at a life in Christ as I am able to manifest has mometns when one feels like a gazelle (instead of a dork? - subtle biblical joke there.).
Can we look at the argument again? Is it part of the rules that one can say no more than 150 words or so before was has to take another lick at the Catholics? If so, include me out. I'll talk theology with just about anybody. I don't play Mexican Stand-down. It's fruitless and boring.
IN general, I think we know that there were some rather splendid scoundrels in high positions in the Church. But I do not think we have enough data to know either way about the every day RC in the parishes and pews. If i may take myself as an example, while the Episcopal Church was crumbling around me and demonstrating that not only were its orders invalid but they didn't give a hoot whether they were valid or not -- or even Christian or not -- I drew from Cranmer, Hooker, Herbert, Lewis, and yes Luther and Calvin and even a very little Zwingli (as well as Augustine and Aquinas, et al.) enough good that finally I packed up my pension and threw it overboard, left Ur of the Anglicans and travelled down the fertile crescent to the Tiber. Pipes rusty to the point of crumbling still can deliver good water.
SO clearly I don't think the plene esse left the RCC in the early 16th century. But I can appreciate the argument, to a certain extent.
A league is generally the distance traversed in an hour's walking time or about 3 km or 1.5 miles. A furlong is an eigth of a mile in English units.
The Roman mile was 5000 ped (ft) and the league was 7500 ft.
A furlong was 660 ft, used in agriculture and a contraction of forrow' long. The English penchant for a system of measures which were divisible by two and four, petitioned the Queen to change the definition of mile from 5000 ft to 5280ft so that an English mile would equal 8 furlongs.
If we are considering the measurements recorded in Revelation to John, Chap 21:vss 15-17, the angel used a reed to measure the breadth and length at 12,000 stadia, translated in the KJV to furlong.
The stadia is the general dimension of a stadium for footraces interpretted as being anywhere from 185 to 192 meters in length (607-630ft). There might be an interpretation of stadia associated with the process of measurement, so although John 's revelation provided the metric, the identification of that metric to our daily use might have different conversion factors.
1500 miles square seems fairly reasonable as the space used for a city for all the believers in human history.
Good morning Timer,
Your assumption of "eventually you'll understand the noah flood story as a myth based on a KATRINA type hurricane" is incorrect. I will not. And please stop referring to Noah and his family as "illiterate pakistanis" that passed their tribes history down through lore. God's Word has been carried through the generations and it has not changed. It
is the only constant you can base your soul on in this world. Do I picture the ark as paintings from Sunday School - no. Do I picture the ark, as you do, as some raft covered with goat skin - no.
Your analogy of children whispering a phrase in each others ears and it becoming unrecogizable is true and when I was a child I did that. For that reason I agreed with you in my last reply, however you may not equate that with God's Word.
Also you believe the story of Noah is a "security blanket" and allows me to hide from the truth - How?
Your next paragrph of "the devil has always been a trickster....he'll snare you too", is partly true. I pray he will not snare me or others. But yes, he warps and changes the Word to fit his plan. At times he even says it is a myth and shouldn't be listened to. Things are hidden in the Word and it is up to us to search for it. We may find that truth on different levels but it should never contradict each other's idea of the truth. It has to fit together, to become one.
Your statement of:
"Once again he'll use the trick hitler used on the german people : You are BEAUTIFUL, FANTASTIC, SUPERIOR in every way. A CON ALWAYS SOUNDS WONDERFUL. It wouldn't work if it didn't SOUND WONDERFUL. That's how the SUCKER is always hooked."
That is not the trick he will use. If he could trick us so easily, if we were so vain, if we had not read God's Word with understanding and knew that He loved all His children, we would not be true Christians. He will deceive many of those that love Christ but not with that ploy.
Your next paragraph:
"Jesus said that you are worth more than the whole earth. What he's referring to is your QUALITATIVE SPIRIT, not your puny little body walking around on an ocean bottom. When you die it's your SPIRIT body that goes on. Me? I'm a righteous guy, finding out the TRUTH of things is what I'm about, not going with the buffalo herd over the cliff...."
Of course Jesus was talking about our soul, all of it is about our soul. (by the way - my puny little body never walked around on the ocean bottom). I'm glad that you are a "righteous guy" but be very careful. If you continue to step on His Word and disregard it so blatantly by believing yourself to be so much wiser than it is you may indeed walk over a very deep cliff. Remember, "And the Word was God".
So Timer, I don't wish to be conned, be a sucker, look for the Big Prize in the mail, and certainly have no ambition to be a nazi, or any of the other slurs you threw my way but I do search. That is the reason I ask for your opinion and others. I do value those opinions but I must have them witnessed from His Word.
Thank you for this reply and I look forward to your next in which you speak of "cliffs and floods: the flood road".
From this board. Do you deny that it has taken you a long time to come to grasp what the West teaches on such issues as original sin, purgatory, and the Trinity? If I recall, they didn't have internet back then - so it seems to me it was VERY LIKELY that their ignorance of Western teachings was present.
Regard
I believe you overestimate the ability of the Eastern laity to get their hands on Western theological tracts in 1200 and make the distinction between East and West. I think you are forgeting that there was a language barrier between East and West that shouldn't be overlooked. Did the average lay person in Slovakia speak Latin???!!! Hardly.
The Hesychast controversy is a good example of this - as no one stepped up from the East to say that the prime defender of Scholasticism, Barlaam, was not accurately explaining what Thomas Aquinas taught. Not surprisingly, the East were able to exploit Barlaam's lack of exposition and advance Gregory Palamas' ideas and concepts.
IF there were so many knowledgeable Easterners on Western theology, Scholasticism wouldn't have been so poorly represented.
Regards
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