Sunday, 05 April 2009

  • Stuff Christians Like: The Passion of the Christ

    by Jon Acuff of Stuff Christians Like

    I had an easier time connecting with God in the movie, Man on Fire than I did in The Passion of the Christ. That doesn't make a whole lot of sense. I mean the Mel Gibson movie made roughly 786 gazillion dollars and was loved by Christians the world over. Man on Fire is a bloody revenge film with very little God. How can I write that first sentence?

    I think that the God element in Man on Fire was a strong undercurrent that caught me off guard. It surprised me and engaged me in an unexpected way. I enjoyed the Passion of the Christ. I thought it was good. But I went in expecting God and faith and Christianity. So when it appeared I was ready for it. And in communication, one of the ways to grab someone is to show instead of tell. Instead of saying, "this character is cool" in a movie, you show the audience tangible ways that exhibit how the character is cool. That way, the audience gets to write their own story instead of just digesting your story. Man on Fire showed me God's love, the Passion of the Christ told me God's love. But that still doesn't really justify thinking Man on Fire is a better picture of Christ than the Passion of the Christ. So let me explain a little, but please know I am about to ruin the end of Man on Fire.

    In the film, Denzel Washington plays the role of Creasy, an alcoholic black ops military man in Mexico City serving as a bodyguard for a little girl named Pita. Pita is a blonde sprite of a seven-year-old played by the ubiquitous Dakota Fanning. Throughout the first half of the film we watch as Creasy hits rock bottom, only to find a new reason to live in Pita. Along the way, we see him spend increasing amounts of time in the Bible.

    But because this is at the core a revenge film, Pita is kidnapped after a piano lesson. Creasy is shot multiple times and the doctors say that without a month of rest, he will die. While Creasy is trapped in bed, Pita is executed by the kidnappers. He is devastated, his world collapsing in memories of Pita laughing and playing. He leaves the hospital and decides to track down the killers.

    In a hinge scene, the young mother of Pita asks Creasy what he is going to do. His response is simple, “What I do best, I’m going to kill em. Anyone that was involved, anyone that profited from it, anyone that opens their eyes at me.” This statement serves as the doorway to a veritable house of pain and suffering. The violence is shocking in both its graphicness and its creativity.

    At this point, my initial idea that I saw the love of Christ in this movie seems impossible. We do not serve a God that would torture a man with a cigarette lighter or plant a plastic explosive inside another kidnapper. Our God is not cruel. I think that’s worthy of argument though, at least from an Old Testament point of view. Would the Egyptian mothers that woke to find their first born children dead in their beds agree that God can not be cruel? Would the residents of Sodom, with flesh ripped apart by sulfur falling from the sky agree that God is not violent? I’m not saying these things were not justified. I just think that maybe we make too light of the fury and might of God.

    After cutting a swath of death through Mexico City, Creasy finds the pregnant wife and brother of the villain, simply referred to as “The Voice.” The Voice asks him on the phone, “How much do you want?” Creasy responds by saying “Your brother wants to speak to you, hold on” at which point he shoots off all the fingers of the brother’s hand with a shotgun. “I’m going to take your family apart piece by piece. You understand me? Piece by piece. I don’t want your money. You understand me? I want you!” It’s numbing really, the brother tied up to a pole with a bloody stump of a hand, the pregnant wife wailing. But that’s when grace first makes an appearance. The Voice calls back and says “I will give you a life for a life. I will give you her life for your life.”

    The camera spins on a confused Creasy as he struggles with the idea that Pita is still alive. Suddenly the violence, the rage, the wrath of Creasy sinks out of his face. In the final scene, Creasy, Pita’s mother and the kidnapper’s brother drive to an abandoned bridge in the middle of the Mexican countryside. With a bullet ridden body and a weariness that is almost three dimensional, Creasy walks up the bridge. When the kidnappers see him waiting there, they pull a hooded Pita out of the car. They remove her dirty blindfold and with eyes not accustomed to light, she squints toward the bridge. With the sound of a child witnessing an unlocked gate in hell, she screams “Creasy” and runs to the bridge. Creasy, unable to run from all the pain, waits. She jumps into his arms, and with hands dotted with blood and scars he cradles her. This is what follows:

    Creasy: “Are you alright? They didn’t hurt you?”

    Pita: Shakes her head no.

    Creasy: Laughing and smiling in relief, “Hi.” More laughter. “Alright your mother is waiting for
    you; she’s right down at the end of the bridge. OK, you go home.”

    Pita: “OK. Where are you going?”

    Creasy: “I’m going home too.”

    Pita runs to the arms of her mother. A red laser scope lands on Creasy’s heart, which he covers with a hand that is covered in scars. He throws up his hands and walks slowly to the kidnappers. He stumbles to his knees as they drag him into a car. Pita cries watching Creasy surrender to certain death. Creasy closes his eyes in the car and dies.

    I missed it the first ten times I saw the movie. Missed that I’m Pita. I’ve lived most of my life under the stairs in a dark, dirty cage. But unlike Pita, this is the place I deserve. For although she did not ask to be kidnapped or receive this experience as a consequence of her actions, I did. If this were the story of my life, justice would have already been served. The prisoner’s life is the life I deserve. But God is like Creasy. In Isaiah 30:18 it says “he rises to show you compassion.”

    The new life that Creasy finds when he meets Pita is but a glimpse at how God delights in us. And it is this love, this affection that drives Him to rescue us. But is He violent? Is there anything He wouldn’t do to rescue me and rescue you? I don’t think so. To the violence question we need only look to verses like Numbers 24:8 in which the Israelites, God’s people, are said to “devour hostile nations and break their bones in pieces.” That was describing work and battles that the Lord had blessed.

    Is that any less graphic than anything that happens in Man on Fire? God’s love has no limits. If violence is what it would take to rescue me, I have little doubt that He would be violent. That He would remove an entire planet in a flood to save the righteous family of Noah. And even though He is blessed with the ability to open the core of the earth with His fury, it is love and ultimate surrender that shows us the true depth of His heart. In the movie, Creasy could have easily continued killing the kidnapper’s family. The brother could have been tortured, the pregnant wife and unborn child of the kidnapper murdered. But it wasn’t about revenge, it was about rescue. And when Pita was discovered to be alive, he stopped everything. He surrendered and walked willingly into a certain death.

    In his last moments, before the cross, the undeniable power of Christ is revealed one more time as he heals one of the Roman guard's ears. And yet he denies it. He surrenders to his captors. That’s how I felt about the last scene in Man on Fire. Creasy had just blown off all the fingers of the brother. He had the pregnant wife and a shotgun and a mouth full of loud, angry words. But the second he knew Pita was alive, he surrendered.

    I've written about it before because the scene really shook me. It made me realize, this is the Christ I serve. Powerful, fearful, able to heal the sick and blind, capable of walking on water itself. But willing to give it all up upon realizing I am found. Willing to pay the ransom with his own life. Willing to free me from a prison of my own design. And whether he’s crucified on a cross or forced to walk across a bridge in Mexico, he’s willing to do it all over again for me. And for you.

    p.s. I liked Passion. I thought it was a well done movie. The most powerful scene to me was when Gibson showed the boy Jesus and the man Jesus stumble to the ground. My one criticism is that it felt really full. I like movies that leave me room to climb in and Passion felt bursting at the seams so it was hard for me to engage with it in some scenes.

Comments (11)

  • accidental_racist@xanga

    interesting parallels there.
    but do you think God is willing to commit all sorts of violence against others in order to rescue you?
    what makes you more special than all those others that God would destroy, according to this interpretation?

  • deepestrecesses

    @accidental_racist@xanga - I agree.

    It is awesome that you are searching for parallels, and that you have a mind that reminds you of Christ in some things that you see.... but it worries me, from experience, when people watch movies such as this, and then proceed to take "christian" themes from them- movies that are riddled with violence.

    You did pose one question (sort of)- would God commit violence to save me.  No.  Sodam and Gomorah, and the Flood were acts of judgment upon sinful cities and a sinful world- God saved the few righteous from both by warning them to get out, and telling them how to escape. 

    I'm not intending to be 'nit-picky' though admitedly this probably was.  I have experienced people who incorporate way to many false doctrine from movies, and they spend so much time enthralled in movies, like Man on Fire, that are about a 180 degree turn from where God wants us to be.  Based upon this experience I would just say to be careful in the kinds of movies we watch.  My grandfather once said that "at first 5% falsehood gets slipped in under 95% truth.  After that is excepted, then 10%, 20% 50% and eventually you have 99% falsehood being slipped in under 1% of the truth." 

    Interesting ideas though. 

  • Mrsbear7@xanga

    Good post.  Isn't it awesome how God sometimes reveals himself to us through movies?  Something similar happened to me when I watched "Braveheart" for the first time: as William Wallace suffered, I saw Christ's suffering.  And when Wallace screamed "Freedom!" in the movie, I was reminded how Christ's suffering brought me freedom from my sin, form the world and from Satan. 


    Powerful stuff.  It's wonderful to see redemption and the Gospel in movies... whether it was on purpose or not.
  • LoBornlyte@xanga

    "Man on Fire" showed me God's love, the "Passion of the Christ" told me God's love.


    The graphic film portrayal of Christ sacrificing his life is God showing his love.  Jesus' entire life was God showing his love.


    We do not serve a God that would torture a man with a cigarette lighter or plant a plastic explosive inside another kidnapper.


    Take a look again at how Jesus was tortured during the Crucifixion.  What Jesus went through was worse than anything Creasy dished out in your movie.


    And what happened to Jesus was the will of God.

  • bigcatholicmicah@xanga

    Faith in Culture.... it is finding the nuggets of Truth, the shades of Gospel in songs, movies, books, that help make the Gospel real in new ways in our lives, and the lives of the world.  GREAT POST!!!

  • Nitzchiya@xanga

    Would God use violence to save you, if needed?  I highly doubt it.  Consider all the innocent children who are killed each year.  Did God use violence to save them?  I think not.  If anyone is worthy of being rescued, I think it would be them, without question, yet God allows many of them to die horrid deaths at the hands of sick, violet individuals.


    Many christians have suffered and been murdered throughout the years, and God never used violence to rescue them.  You are no greater than any of them.  None of us are.  God already allowed terrible violence to save us all through the crucifixion of his son.  We cannot expect anything more.

  • butXsometimesXtheyXcomeXback@xanga

    I completely agree about finding God and unexpected grace in Man on Fire. It's one of my favorite movies, primarily because of the beginning and ending scenes (I could care less about all the "revenge" and torturing stuff). The final scene with Creasy and Pita reduces me to tears every time I watch it.


    I wouldn't say that Man on Fire is a "Christian" movie by any stretch of the imagination (what I mean by that is that I wouldn't recommend that, say, my pastor or the kids from the youth group watch it just because it has a powerful message), but it definitely portrays God's heart in a unique way.


  • Lynnjynh9315@xanga

    @Nitzchiya@xanga - Is is possible that letting the children die IS God's mercy. Children are not yet responsible for their own actions, whereas if God let them grow to maturity their own actions could likely condemn them to damnation.

    God also gave men the gift of freewill. We make our our choices, whether good or bad, and God does not interfere. "Horrid deaths" is an example of people exercising their freewill to affect others... in a negative way.

  • SWAurora@xanga

    I can't watch the Passion of the Christ. I find it utterly disturbing. Our church played clips from it during communion and a lot of people complained. I have never watched the whole thing and I don't think I need to. You find God in a lot of movies, sacrifice and redemptive powers being a common theme. I will take those over watching  a man be torn to shreds in order to "understand" Christ's sacrifice. I understand, but it doesn't mean I want to see that.

  • wiseguysupreme4@xanga
  • jmgbme@xanga

    Man on Fire is a powerful movie.


    The Passion is also a powerful movie.


    However, I would have to say that the reason Man on Fire is powerful is that it has a theme of self-sacrifice. Ideas of redemption and sacrifice seem to strike a universal chord in people. Those are themes found in the cross, and it is true. It's the human story.


    Still, all that being said, Creasy's sacrifice in the end reflects the cross, not the other way around. Be careful not to apply blanket statement Christian theology to a secular movie that just happens to have a theological theme or two in it.


    Good thoughts, though. Definitely some stuff worth thinking about.

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