footprints of my life... Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light for my path. --Psalm 119:105

Home
Archives

My Photoblog

about me
email



Add to Google
blogger.com
Web Hosting
By Brinkster


footprints since
March 12, 2003
 
Friday, December 19

The Passion

I found this review of "The Passion" to be very informative and makes me even more excited to see this film. I cried when i saw the trailor for the first time... I am going to have to take a box of klenex to the cinema when i go. I just hope they show it here in England. Please I encourage you once again to go to official website by clicking the link above and sign your name to a petition to have it shown in your area.



Subject: MEL GIBSON'S "THE PASSION" VIEWED IN DC

Keith A Fournier is a constitutional lawyer and a graduate of the
John Paul II Institute of the Lateran University, Franciscan University
and the University of Pittsburgh. He holds degrees in Philosophy,
theology and law. He has been a champion of religious liberty and
appeared as CO-counsel in major cases at the United States Supreme
Court. He is the author of seven books and, along with his law practice,
serves as the president of both the "Your Catholic Voice Foundation"
and "Common Good."
_______________

I really did not know what to expect. I was thrilled to have been
invited to a private viewing of Mel Gibson's film "The Passion,"
but I had also read all the cautious articles and spin. I grew up in a
Jewish town and owe much of my own faith journey to the influence.
I I have a life long, deeply held aversion to anything that might
even indirectly encourage any form of anti-Semitic thought, language or
actions.

I arrived at the private viewing for "The Passion", held in
Washington DC and greeted some familiar faces. The environment was
typically Washingtonian, with people greeting you with a smile but
seeming to look beyond you, having an agenda beyond the words. The
film was very briefly introduced, without fanfare, and then the
room darkened. From the gripping opening scene in the Garden of
Gethsemane, to the very human and tender portrayal of the earthly
ministry of Jesus, through the betrayal, the arrest, the scourging,
the way of the cross, the encounter with the thieves, the surrender
on the Cross, until the final scene in the empty tomb, this was not
simply a movie; it was an encounter, unlike anything I have ever
experienced.

In addition to being a masterpiece of film-making and an artistic
triumph, "The Passion" evoked more deep reflection, sorrow and
emotional reaction within me than anything since my wedding, my
ordination or the birth of my children. Frankly, I will never be
the same. When the film concluded, this "invitation only" gathering of
"movers and shakers" in Washington, DC were shaking indeed, but
this time from sobbing. I am not sure there was a dry eye in the
place. The crowd that had been glad-handing before the film was
now eerily silent. No one could speak because words were woefully
inadequate. We had experienced a kind of art that is a rarity in
life, the kind that makes heaven touch earth.

One scene in the film has now been forever etched in my mind. A
brutalized, wounded Jesus was soon to fall again under the weight
of the cross. His mother had made her way along the Via Della Rosa.
As she ran to him, she flashed back to a memory of Jesus as a child,
falling in the dirt road outside of their home. Just as she reached
to protect him from the fall, she was now reaching to touch his
wounded adult face. Jesus looked at her with intensely probing and
passionately loving eyes (and at all of us through the screen) and
said "Behold I make all things new." These are words taken from
the last Book of the New Testament, the Book of Revelations. Suddenly,
the purpose of the pain was so clear and the wounds, that earlier
in the film had been so difficult to see in His face, His back, indeed
all over His body, became intensely beautiful. They had been borne
voluntarily for love.

At the end of the film, after we had all had a chance to recover, a question
and answer period ensued. The unanimous praise for the film, from a
rather diverse crowd, was as astounding as the compliments were effusive.
The questions included the one question that seems to follow this film, even
though it has not yet even been released. "Why is this film considered by
some to be "anti-Semitic?" Frankly, having now experienced (you do not
"view" this film) "the Passion" it is a question that is impossible to answer.
A law professor whom I admire sat in front of me. He raised his hand and
responded "After watching this film, I do not understand how anyone can
insinuate that it even remotely presents that the Jews killed Jesus. It doesn't."
He continued "It made me realize that my sins killed Jesus" I agree.
There is not a scintilla of anti-Semitism to be found anywhere in this
powerful film. If there were, I would be among the first to decry it.
It faithfully tells the Gospel story in a dramatically beautiful, sensitive
and profoundly engaging way.

Those who are alleging otherwise have either not seen the film or have
another agenda behind their protestations. This is not a "Christian" film,
in the sense that it will appeal only to those who identify themselves as
followers of Jesus Christ. It is a deeply human, beautiful story that will
deeply touch all men and women. It is a profound work of art. Yes, its
producer is a Catholic Christian and thankfully has remained faithful to
the Gospel text; if that is no longer acceptable behavior than we are all
in trouble. History demands that we remain faithful to the story and
Christians have a right to tell it. After all, we believe that it is the greatest
story ever told and that its message is for all men and women. The greatest
right is the right to hear the truth.

We would all be well advised to remember that the Gospel narratives
to which "The Passion" is so faithful were written by Jewish men who
followed a Jewish Rabbi whose life and teaching have forever changed
the history of the world. The problem is not the message but those
who have distorted it and used it for hate rather than love. The
solution is not to censor the message, but rather to promote the kind
of gift of love that is Mel Gibson's filmmaking masterpiece, "The Passion."

It should be seen by as many people as possible. I intend to do everything
I can to make sure that is the case. I am passionate about "The Passion."
You will be as well. Don't miss it!


- footprints of Chad, 5:39 PM

Comments: Post a Comment

My status

me

Picture of Me

My name is Chad and I live in in Woodbridge, VA near Washington DC. I am old. My wife's name is Jen and we have two dogs named Ripley and Rascal.

recent footprints

Settling InI am finally starting to get settled in...
Star of Bethlehem
Thanksgiving in GermanySo life as an officer is ke...
American food in EnglandSo I went to an American R...
Arrived and AdjustingI have been in England now si...
Exciting Weekend Planned and More on Online Datine...
Winning Big!So I have had a good evening. Started ...
SkypeI tried SkypeToday for the first time since I...
BCOT, Europe and SkypeI've been at BCOT (Basic Com...
I don't know who wrote this but I thought it was p...

links

Sara Groves
Desired Life
Military Ministry
footprints poem
Statement of Faith


Creative Commons License
© Chad J.
footprints of my life...