Posted on 04/27/2011 8:10:30 AM PDT by Alex Murphy
(RNS) In its new Sunday night series, The Borgias, Showtime has found the magic combination for ultimate crowd appeal in a scintillating soap opera about a bad-boy pope.
The Borgias follows the quasi-historic story of the Spanish noble family who, with the ascent of Rodrigo Borgia as Pope Alexander VI in 1492, brought a nighttime-television-style era of debauchery to the papacy.
The Borgias were infamous for simony buying and selling church offices and sacraments. In their case, they bought the papacy through bribery and coercion.
But dont forget the sexual promiscuity, bribery, double-crossing, incest, blackmail, murder, poisoning and all manner of unabashedly sinful behavior.
The debut episodes of The Borgias on Sunday (April 3) opened with scenes of intrigue and titillation. Called to the death bed of Pope Innocent VII, Cardinal Rodrigo Borgia (Jeremy Irons) plots to become the next pope by any means necessary.
Meanwhile, his eldest son Cesare (Francois Arnaud) an 18-year-old bishop of the church and his fetching paramour engage in an athletic sexual encounter while his adolescent sister Lucretia (Holliday Grainger) watches through an open window.
Some viewers likely went scrambling to Wikipedia to look up the Borgias during those opening scenes, curious about these cardinals (and popes) who had lovers and children. According to the series, Borgia had numerous children by several mistresses; Pope Innocent VIII fathered a dozen offspring as well. In the 15th century, at least according to The Borgias, it was commonplace for Catholic clerics to have mistresses and large families despite their vows of celibacy.
At a time when stories of clergy sex abuse still regularly make international news, naughty popes and Catholic leaders behaving badly might strike a certain resonance with viewers, if fueled by nothing more than a sense of schadenfreude.
As the debut episodes unfold, Rodrigo buys his way to the throne of St. Peter; a cardinal is poisoned at a lavish dinner with other princes of the church; another cardinal is framed for murdering a chambermaid in his bed; and a traitorous assassin is paid to do the Borgia familys dirty work.
But wait, theres more: the new pope uses a tunnel from the Vatican to the villa of the murdered cardinal for regular rolls in the hay with his new mistress; his old mistress, meanwhile, promises to remain chaste now that the father of her children occupies the papal throne.
In short, the papacy has rarely looked worse than it does in The Borgias. And maybe thats part of its appeal.
Not surprisingly, the arrival of the tawdry papal soap opera in the middle of Lent did not go unnoticed by the New York-based Catholic League, the perennial defenders of any and all perceived pop culture assaults directed at the Catholic Church.
In recent statements, Catholic League president Bill Donohue questioned why Vatican officials hadnt formally protested The Borgias.
For one thing, Catholics are used to being slammed by Hollywood, so The Borgias hardly shakes them, Donohue said. Catholics dont expect perfection from (their) clergy. This, however, is beside the point. The most immediate issue is why Showtime decided to gift Catholics with this series during the Lenten season.
An obvious answer is that this is the high season for all things spiritual. During Lent with its fasting, abstaining, ashes, rituals and holy days religion is a hot topic.
The Catholic Church is an evergreen for pop culture clashes. Theres something about Catholicism that seems to lend itself so well to film and television and capture the popular imagination with a kind of passion that, say, Presbyterianism or Lutheranism dont.
Well, for one thing its colorful literally. All those cassocks and albs and miters and vestments makes for visually arresting television, said the Rev. James Martin, a Catholic priest and prolific author of titles such as A Jesuit Guide to (Almost) Everything.
Its the combination of power, money, religion, sex and sin. Thats almost unbeatable television, even if its not altogether historically accurate.
Catholicism has that certain something that makes it well suited to vivid (and sometimes controversial) media depictions, said Tom Beaudoin, associate professor of theology at Fordham University.
Catholicism offers an unusually compelling mix of qualities that is well-suited for media culture: its taste for the ritually spectacular, its evident culture of secrecy, its elicitation and denial of erotic and homoerotic experience, its historic enmeshment with secular power, Beaudoin said.
As everyone now knows, this is a tradition both beautiful and dangerous and that makes for compelling media today.
Beyond all the high church hedonism, there seems to be something else that keeps viewers tuning in to a cant-look-away car crash like The Borgias. Maybe its really all about us, and not them.
Theres a fascination with the sins of the powerful, whether its Henry VIII or the Borgias, Martin said. It may make viewers feel that our sins arent so bad: we sin from time to time, but at least were not poisoning our relatives.
....In recent statements, Catholic League president Bill Donohue questioned why Vatican officials hadnt formally protested The Borgias....
....The Catholic Church is an evergreen for pop culture clashes. Theres something about Catholicism that seems to lend itself so well to film and television and capture the popular imagination with a kind of passion that, say, Presbyterianism or Lutheranism dont.
Related threads:
Know your popes: Historian Thomas W. Worcester traces dramatic changes in the papacy over 500 years
Follies of Roman Catholicism: How the Catholic Church failed to save itself from the Reformation
How the Renaissance Papacy contributed to the Reformation
God doesnt create junk: Identifying a God worth serving
OMG...the Catholic Church has sinners in it!
Once again infallible in matters of teaching faith and morals does not mean impeccable.
Donohue cracks me up.
The one thing you can say about Romanists, they are predictable.
It must be nice for you Protestants to be entirely sinless and spotless. I suppose you don’t really need Jesus’ salvation in that case...
What sort of faith and morals do you believe that the popes taught, through their behavior?
And not surprisingly, the propagation of a hit piece on the Church by the usual suspects on FR does not go unnoticed either.
It’s an entertaining show. And as Pope Alexander said, maybe even God can use flawed people to do Good on His world.
Of course, we’d never see a similar show about Islam during Ramadan.
Yeah, it's called "standards"; unwavering notions of right and wrong regardless of time and whatever sinners may occupy clerical offices. Relax those standards (as the Presbyterians and Lutherans have) and maybe pop culture will leave you alone.
Extortion, pure and simple.
Now Alex, didn’t anyone ever tell you not to get your history lessons from hollywood?
Oh you think we have a religion of follow their example? I’m amazed once again at the inability of the anti Catholics to grasp this very simple fact. The Truth of the Catholic faith is not made less because it has at times been protected by knaves of the worste order. The beauty of Truth is that it does not depend on the messenger. Remember that next time somebody assails against Christianity because a preacher or lay person or even yourself or myself fell and committed a sin.
The Truth of Catholic faith is not protected by fallen, sinful men. It is protected by the Holy Spirit as promised by Christ Himself.
Just as sinful men inspired by the Holy Spirit wrote the infallible Scripture so it is with the teachings of the Catholic Church.
Mind too that of course a Showtime series is the best source for in depth non prejudicial scholarship on matters of religion.
It does explain their ‘tude quite a bit.
Besides, however corrupted I bet the average monk or parishioner had more faith then than we do now in our decadent opulence and age of bloated self import.
I am shocked at what this sinful corrupt Pope wrote
” Hence, heartily commending in the Lord this your holy and praiseworthy purpose, and desirous that it be duly accomplished, and that the name of our Savior be carried into those regions, we exhort you very earnestly in the Lord and by your reception of holy baptism, whereby you are bound to our apostolic commands, and by the bowels of the mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ, enjoy strictly, that inasmuch as with eager zeal for the true faith you design to equip and despatch this expedition, you purpose also, as is your duty, to lead the peoples dwelling in those islands and countries to embrace the Christian religion; nor at any time let dangers or hardships deter you therefrom, with the stout hope and trust in your hearts that Almighty God will further your undertakings.”
Let us see if these geniuses can figure out how this Pope matters to American history or the history of Western Civilization as a whole.
Despite being a high-magnitude creep, he never attempted to solemnly teach heresy as truth. (Because he never attempted to solemnly teach anything, of course.)
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