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The Passion of the Christ Reviewed

 


Chad Bresson

I have had mixed feelings since seeing the movie Monday night (February 16).  On the one hand, it was a great *movie*, surely ending the pseudo-accolades that have been given the poorly produced/acted “Jesus film” the past 25 years (good-bye, “Jesus film” :-)).  The Gibson product lived up to the hype and then some, and what with all the pre-release hub-bub of the past few months, Gibson will make some in Hollywood wish they had been more congenial with their distribution abilities. Just two days ago, the film’s current distributor increased the number of opening screens by 40%, almost guaranteeing a blockbuster debut on Wednesday.

Like others who’ve been to the pre-screenings around the country, I too was moved, gripped, disturbed (the flogging scene will make some ill… I wouldn’t advise a child see this) and emotive.  The 6000 who saw the film at the National Religious Broadcasters convention in Charlotte Monday night filed out of the ballroom in stunned silence, too drained to speak.  Who cannot ponder the Father’s wrath vented on the Son in vicarious atonement without emotion?  The sights and sounds (the soundtrack is superb and more than likely is headed for its own windfall) will not soon be forgotten, Gibson the producer having accomplished his task of indelible impression.

The violence is both believable and unbelievable at the same time.  “Believable” because of the historical record in the gospels.  “Unbelievable” because we evangelicals have sanitized the cross of its suffering to the point where the picture presented by The Lord’s Table is no longer shocking and our gospel is no longer offensive.  The movie may be a healthy dose of “reality” for those who have been guilty of trivializing and moralizing the cross. 

And it’s the implications of that violence inherent to “The Christ Event” that make the film controversial… and not coincidentally, for the very same implications of the violence that the cross has been an offense for almost 2000 years.  If the history of the “Jesus film” is understood as precedence (especially in third world and Muslim countries), someone(s) will die because of “The Passion of the Christ”.

But Gibson the theologian is a little more disconcerting.  I’m not sure that evangelicalism knows the heavy dose of Catholicism it is about to receive via an embedded theology in the storyline.  I’ve read many of the reactions in the news reports and websites of evangelical pastors and others who have seen the film in California, Chicago and Florida.  I was disappointed to find what has been passed off as “artistic license” is not that, but is sound, Catholic theology flying in under our “artistic license” radar.  Evangelicals are passing it off unwittingly as “artistic license”, because evangelicals have no clue what is the content of Marian theology.  Only one review I read, by Family Life’s Bob Lepine, identified some of the Catholic elements to the movie.

My initial reflection on the film, in my seat before leaving the hall, is that I had been witness to Mel Gibson’s mass (those thoughts were reinforced later in the week in a commentary published by Zenit.org, a Catholic news outlet.  Upon seeing the film, Catholic journalist Vittorio Messori suggests: “This film, for its author, is a Mass…”) It’s too early to tell, but it could be that the legacy of this movie is its value to the Catholic community.

As Lepine pointed out, there can be no mistaking the flashbacks to the breaking of the bread while Christ is nailed to the cross as Gibson ties the crucifixion to the Eucharist.  This in itself is not so offensive insofar as the Table “remembers” Christ’s redemption accomplished and applied.  The Eucharist understood as the Catholic Mass becomes more pointed in the incessant beating of the Marian drum through the entirety of the movie.  As one moviegoer has put it: “I’ll never look at Mass the same way again”, although I would grant one might never look at the Table the same way again.  Nor can there be the mistaking of the stations of the cross (I counted Christ falling down five? times along the Via Dolorosa), a staple to the Catholic church’s Passion week.

There are four fundamental flaws in the theology of the movie that should not be allowed to fly under our radar, especially if we are intent (and for good reason, IMHO) on using the film as a catalyst for evangelism.  The first is Mary as co-redemptrix.  Gibson goes to great pains to make sure that Mary is covered in blood before the end of the movie.  In fact, the lasting image of the movie in my mind is not Christ hanging on a cross, but bloody Mary hanging on to her son.  Yes, I’ve read the some of the responses from others who have seen the movie: what mother would not follow after and grieve for her son?  Is not the film merely capturing the broken heart of the mother? 

Hardly.  Having denied Christ three times, a despondent and repentant Peter falls at “the Mother’s” feet (Mary is continuously referred to as “Mother” in the movie) and asks for her pardon.  Describing Mary’s futile attempt to wipe up the blood from the scourging, one Catholic commentator says, “Theologians will also note here Mary's appreciation for Jesus' precious blood…”  Gibson then parallels the movements of Mary and Satan along the Via Dolorosa, two alter egos, with Mary as Christ’s comfort during Satan’s final “temptation”.  Per co-redemptrix theology, Mary “suffers” with Christ at the trial, along the Via Dolorosa and at the foot of the cross, to the point of uttering  the co-redemptrix mantra through blood-stained lips: “Would that I could die with you.” (my paraphrase).    Concisely put: those who think the storyline tracking Mary is merely artistic license in capturing the grief of Christ’s mother are grossly underestimating Marian co-redemptrix theology.

The second flaw is a little more subjective and subtle than the overt Marian theology and has more to do with the film’s affect on the viewer.  The movie leaves the audience emotionally drained, IMHO, not as much because of the crucifixion itself, but because of a scourging that seemed at the time interminable.  The flogging scene dwarfs the crucifixion in terms of time spent in the movie, intensity, and suffering.  This, too, is historical Catholic theology and is grounded in the suffering of the Mass.  The importance of the Mass is its suffering, rather than the death, although the sacrifice is perpetually made in the Mass.  The audience has little doubt that Gibson’s focal point in the movie is the flogging and unfortunately this minimizes the importance of the suffering of the Son on the cross. 

Gibson’s myopic treatment of the scourging puts the crucifixion in the anti-climax and unfortunately undermines the highest point of suffering in the entire passion: the father’s rejection of the son.  This is the suffering of the garden and it is the suffering of the cross.  By shifting the focus from the cross to the flogging, the Father’s rejection of the Son and its centrality to the crucifixion is nearly lost (save the obligatory, “My God, My God” that is in the text and, therefore, in the movie).  Lost completely (per Catholic theology) is the reality that God killed his Son (see John Piper’s statements below).

The end result of this shift in focal point of the story is that the audience is led to pity Christ, rather than see themselves as the persecutors.  Gibson wants us to pity Christ in the scourging.  Unfortunately, inherent to pity is condescension of the viewer toward the subject of the suffering.  If we do this in the soteric realm, the result is damnation.  We must not pity Christ.  To do so is a failure to be poor in spirit.  It is a failure to see myself as the deserved subject of the punishment that Christ took on my behalf.  Vicarious atonement and the justice of God that it serves leaves no place for pity.

While the Marian and suffering theology is to be expected of a good Catholic, the third flaw nearly sinks the movie.  The movie is around 2 hours and 5 minutes long.  Of that time, less than a minute is devoted to the resurrection at the end of the movie.  All suffering, all crucifixion, a little resurrection.  Voila!  Gibson gives the resurrection the same short shrift that the Mass has been giving the resurrection for centuries.  Unfortunately, this too is passing under the radar.  Jody Dean, a television news anchor in Dallas writes: “The Resurrection scene is perhaps the shortest in the entire movie - and yet it packs a punch that can't be quantified. It is perfect.”  This kind of statement reflects a collective neglect of resurrection doctrine by the evangelical community. 

Even the Reformed community is not immune.  Richard Gaffin points out that the Reformation’s concern was to “make clear that the death of Christ is not simply an ennobling example to be imitated but a substitutionary, expiatory sacrifice that reconciles God to sinners and propitiates his judicial wrath. In short, the salvation accomplished by Christ has become virtually synonymous with the atonement.  This concentration on the death of Christ has no doubt been necessary. But as a consequence the doctrinal or saving significance of his resurrection has been largely overlooked. All too frequently it has been considered exclusively as a stimulus and support for Christian faith (which it surely is) and in terms of its apologetic value, as the crowning evidence for Christ's deity and the truth of Christianity in general.”

Between Romanism’s perpetual crucifixion of Christ in the Mass and the evangelical’s neglect of the resurrection, Gibson’s mere “tip of the hat” to resurrection becomes a monumental flaw.  The net effect of giving no more than a minute to the resurrection in a two-hour movie is a presentation that is only a “part” of the gospel rather than the whole.  Or to put it another way, despite Gibson’s brief inclusion of the resurrection at the end of the movie as a segue into the credits, the net effect is as if he had not presented the resurrection.

Granted, across the course of human history, the crucifixion and resurrection are one and the same Christ event (which would include his birth… the beginnings of Christ’s sufferings).  Yet redemptive history is revealed as a story with a necessary chronological flow that belies the eschatology of the event.  It is in the resurrection that Christ defeated Satan and death (Satan bruised Christ’s heel – death, but Christ crushed Satan’s head – resurrection; Genesis 3:15… which is the backdrop for the memorable incident in Gibson’s Gethsemane), becoming the rightful heir to the Davidic throne from which he now rules (Acts 13:32, 33; Romans 1:2,3).  Because sin and death have been conquered, the resurrection is both the apex and the vortex of human history.  It is that point of human history when time, to quote C. S. Lewis, “start(ed) working backward” (The Lion, The Witch, and the Wardrobe).

Without the resurrection, there is no “new creation”.  It is in the resurrection that our quickening is grounded and our resurrection to consummation in Christ is guaranteed.  What the crucifixion is to justification, the resurrection is to regeneration.  Because of the resurrection, Christ’s people are no longer under condemnation, but are raised to new life.  Of its significance, Geerhardus Vos explains the resurrection as that “epochal event” of human history that “signifies in fact the most radical and all-inclusive transforming event within the entire range of the believer’s experience of salvation”.  The resurrection is “equivalent to ‘becoming a new creation’…” (Geerhardus Vos, The Pauline Eschatology, pg. 150).  We are, as Paul Beasley-Murray puts it, “Easter people.” (PBM, The Message of the Resurrection, pg.17), and it will be up to Easter people to fill in the Resurrection story and implications of the resurrection in the wake of this glaring “omission”.

Providing the apologetics of the resurrection points to the fourth flaw in this movie: Gibson does very little to explain *why* Christ died.  I recollect only one mention… the Isaiah 53 passage and subsequent Gethsemane scene that opens the movie is the first and only allusion to the *why* of the story.  Here, Gibson borrows from "The Dolorous Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ", an accounting of the “visions” of the 18th century Catholic mystic Anne Catherine Emmerich (in the dialogue between Christ and Satan: “Satan, writes Emmerich, addressed Jesus "in words such as these: 'Takest thou even this sin upon thyself? Art thou willing to bear its penalty? Art thou prepared to satisfy for all these sins?’” - from David Neff’s review.), and along the way, the sins of the world are proposed as purpose.  But this scene is the only scene in which there is any semblance of purpose given to Christ’s suffering and death.  Gibson spends time filling out other details of the Christ story with flashback vignettes, but chose not to do so in explaining the purpose of Christ’s death. 

In his various media interviews, Gibson has elaborated on his own answer, suggesting that it was necessary for Christ to deal with the “sin problem”, telling an audience after one of the screenings: “To forgive human sin, there had to be a blood sacrifice", and in his radio interview with Focus on the Family’s James Dobson, said: “It's really obvious from the first frames of the film that (Jesus' death is) a pre-ordained and divine plan…That means the Almighty had this all figured out to put into effect at this time with His Son."

John Piper, who screened the film earlier this year, said this past week in Charlotte that evangelicals must provide the *why* that the film does not or else miss out on a golden opportunity to proclaim the gospel of Jesus Christ.  In his book that gives 50 answers to the question of *why* Christ died,  “The Passion of Jesus Christ”, Piper says: “When all is said and done, the most crucial question is: Why? Why did Christ suffer and die?” (Answering the most controversial question surrounding this movie, Piper says: “The ultimate answer to the question, Who crucified Jesus? is: God did.) 

Christians must be prepared to give an answer as to *why* Christ died in the wake of so little being said in the movie itself, and in fact, Christians must be prepared to provide the question itself.  I could be wrong, but with the movie providing so little in the way of purpose outside of the Gethsemane scene, the collective response of our postmodern moviegoer will most likely be a shrug of the shoulders: “so what?”  The image is the appeal to the postmodern.  Without an interpretive paradigm, the moviegoer is left to interpret the story as he or she sees fit (insert Gibson’s universalistic statements from his Diane Sawyer interview on Monday night… when Sawyer poses the question as to whether Gibson’s “traditionalist view bar(s) the door to heaven for Jews, Protestants, Muslims”, Gibson responds: “That is not the case at all—absolutely not. It is possible for people who are not even Christians to get into the kingdom of heaven. It’s just easier and I have to say this because that’s what I believe...”  This universalism is a stark contrast to what Gibson told Peter Boyer of the New Yorker last fall when he said “There is no salvation for those outside the Church.”).  This is especially the case without a full-orbed resurrection story, because the crucifixion-resurrection is one of those few events in human history that is self-interpretive (see Vos’ Inaugural Address: “They would speak even if left to speak for themselves”).  Part of the gospel is present, albeit in Catholic packaging.  Given the fact that Gibson and the Romanists haven’t gotten the gospel right since at least Trent (1545-1563), that leaves the responsibility of the proclamation (again) to evangelicals.

Does this mean there is no redemptive value to the movie, even to the point it cannot be used in evangelism?  IMHO, no.  Even the mass has a kernel of truth.  Gibson was faithful to the historicity of Christ’s death and resurrection, the common agreement between Protestant and Catholic.  And to his credit, he is putting Christ’s death in front of the postmodern culture, with the same “in your face” attitude that made him a box office “icon” (pun intended…:-)) in an attempt to force the Jesus issue that every living creature must eventually face. 

Despite the Roman Catholicity of the movie, it is the *Event* with which we have been entrusted that we proclaim.  And what is common between the film and that entrustment we must proclaim.  When is the gospel no longer the gospel?  The answer to that question won’t be resolved in this movie.

Since I do not believe the second commandment (even as applied in the New Covenant) is an issue in the portrayal of Christ, IMHO, viewing the film is no more problematic than viewing Lethal Weapon or Braveheart.  But it would be disappointing if those who believe such a presentation is a 2nd commandment violation, while not viewing the movie per their conscience, also fail to use the movie to speak to the postmodern culture that is the circumstantial context for the release of the movie.  One need not condone the making, showing, or viewing of the movie in order to use it as a tool for Christ’s sake.  And one need not embrace the relativistic “end justifies the means” mentality of contemporary evangelicalism in order to explain the *why* to the culture.  The numbers at the box office already suggest that Gibson’s movie is more than a Catholic presentation of Christ’s death.  It has now become a cultural phenomenon (and an evangelical fad, to boot) demanding answers from an objective reality found only in Christ. 

The church is shirking its entrustment, IMHO, if it not ready to give an answer.  It’s one of those built-in opportunities for confronting Americana with Jesus.  I’m not suggesting that evangelical Christians shouldn’t see this movie.  Nor am I suggesting that the American church should not use this movie as a tool for evangelism (although resisting the schmamby pamby rush to gush over this movie as is evident in much of evangelicalism is a *good* thing… :-)).  What I am suggesting is that evangelicals… especially in the reformed camp…in preparing to give that answer, need to be aware of the Catholic elements and shortcomings of the movie, rather than writing them off as mere “artistic license”.  IOW, we should know what we’re getting into. :-)  And more broadly, it’s a call for evangelicals to bring discernment to the apologetic table in confronting our post-modern culture, not to mention our Catholic neighbors and co-workers.

The impact on me personally was that I deserved what Christ received.  It should have been me chained to the flogging post.  It should have been me hanging in between the two thieves.  I didn't get (and won't get) what I deserve.  An innocent man became sin and took my punishment.

God killed Christ instead of me.

And instead, I was the Roman soldiers mocking Christ with a purple robe.  I was the Roman soldiers who took pleasure in beating the Creator.  I was the pious Pharisees conniving to get rid of Christ.  This is what I thought about last Monday night and this is why I too, was silent leaving the hall.

But those thoughts I brought with me in my own theological grid to the movie.  I "imputed" those thoughts onto the screen because I understand what was truly going on.  The postmodern mind does not come to the movie with that grid nor does the movie provide that necessary grid for the postmodern.  Variety’s Todd McCarthy notes this dichotomy in audiences: “(The picture's) notoriety might soon be mitigated for mainstream audiences by word of mouth centered on the prolonged suffering and very vivid gore; at the same time, many true believers ... will be deeply moved. ..."  IOW, the postmodern mind will not get far past the violence and the suffering and it will be those who already “believe” who get the movie’s full effect.

The *only* true value in the movie for the postmodern is what we, the evangelicals who have the entrustment of the gospel, provide in the wake of the movie for the postmodern.  The movie itself is not enough.  Nor do I believe the movie itself is enough to bring someone to a saving knowledge of Christ... unless there has been some semblance of the gospel (planting of the seed) given to that person in the past.  This is why John Piper was emphatic that evangelicals provide the *why* to the movie.

Anti-semitism?  “The Passion of the Christ” is no more anti-semitic than the unadulterated Word (bit of production humor: while the screening I viewed “seemed” to not include the Pharisaical declaration, “his blood be on us and our children”, the scene had not been “cut”… only the subtitles explaining the Aramaic being spoken on the screen had been deleted… kudos to Gibson).  While Christians should have answers for the anti-semitism charge, evangelicals should recognize that the issue will always be a given as long as the Jewish people group kick against the gospel goads.  As R. Albert Mohler Jr. puts it, “At the bottom of all of this lies antipathy toward the Christian Gospel, the four New Testament Gospels and the "scandal of particularity" that lies at the core of the Christian faith.”

Gibson’s Passion has also proven to be a diversion: a movie that portrays “The Gospel of John” in a word for word adaptation (akin to the “Jesus Film” which used Luke) has already been released around the country.  “The Gospel of John” has flown beneath the radar in the wake of “The Passion of the Christ”, despite the fact that it’s John’s gospel, the Apostle John’s use of “the Jews”, and Johannine theology that has historically been blamed for anti-semitism.  There’s no way Gibson’s movie is as “anti-semitic” as “The Gospel of John” or any other movie that purports to be word for word (if ”The Gospel of John” is as close to the Johannine text as its producers claim, its lack of Marian theology may prove more palatable to evangelicals in the long run.)  Christians best defuse such charges 1. by seeing themselves as the Pharisees and Romans, then proclaiming the gospel as forgiven Pharisees and Romans, and 2. by proclaiming, with Piper, that God killed Christ (Isaiah 53:10; Romans 8:32; Romans 3:25).

Some will say this is a Hollywood Jesus.  Some have already said this is an idolatrous Jesus.  It certainly is a Catholic Jesus.  On 2800 screens this Ash Wednesday, “Christ” will be crucified.  Mel will continue to be vilified.  The world will be mystified.  Hollywood or not, idolatrous or not, Catholic or not, the cross remains an offense.  The slaughtered Lamb who holds the scroll of human history (Rev. 5) is at once the world’s judgment and our salvation.  Despite the theological and philosophical differences on how best to address this film in our culture, let us now and always glory in the cross and resurrection of Christ. 

Chad Bresson
Xenia, OH


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