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source: Rationalist
International, Bulletin # 128 (17 July 2004)
The Passion as a Political
Weapon
Gibson's film is extra-biblical
and deceptive
Paul Kurtz
(The Passion of the Christ,
directed by Mel Gibson (USA Newmarket Films, 2004) 127 minutes.)
The
Culture War
The
Passion of the Christ is not simply a movie but a political club;
at least it is being so used against secularists by leading conservative
Christians. TV pundit Bill O’Reilly clearly understands that Mel
Gibson’s film is a weapon in the cultural war now being waged
in America between traditional religionists and secular protagonists—such
as the New York Times, Frank Rich, Andy Rooney, and the predominant
“cultural elite.” Newt Gingrich chortled that the movie may be
“the most important cultural event” of the century. James Dobson
of Focus on the Family and a bevy of preachers herald it as “the
greatest film ever made.” Busloads of devoted churchgoers were
brought daily to view the film, which portrays the arrest, trial,
crucifixion, and death of Jesus with graphic brutality. It is
used to stir sympathy for Jesus, who, half naked, suffers violent
sadomasochistic whippings at the hands of his persecutors; and
it has engendered hostility to Jews, secularists, and separationists
who have dared to question Gibson’s allegedly scripturally accurate
account.
The
Passion of the Christ reinforces a reality secularists dare not
overlook: more than ever before, the Bible has become a powerful
political force in America. The Religious Right is pulling no
punches in order to defeat secularism and, it hopes, transform
the United States into a God-fearing country that salutes “one
nation under God” and opposes gay marriages and the “liberal agenda.”
The interjection of religion into the public square (in fact,
it was never empty) by powerful religious and political forces
has ominous implications. James Madison, framer of the Constitution,
rightfully worried about factions disrupting civil society, and
religious factions can be the most fractious.
Movies
are a powerful medium. Film series including Star Wars, The Lord
of the Rings, Harry Potter, Star Trek, The Terminator, and The
Matrix all draw upon fantasy; and these have proved to be highly
entertaining, captivating, and huge box office hits. The Passion
of the Christ, however, is more than that, for it lays down a
gauntlet challenging basic democratic secular values. It also
presents fantasy as fact, and for the unaware and the credulous,
this is more than an exercise in poetic license; it is artistic
and historical dishonesty.
A
Distorted Version of the Bible
Gibson
has claimed that his film is “a true and faithful rendition of
the Gospels.” This is hardly the case. On numerous occasions,
Passion presents extra-biblical material that distorts the biblical
account. Gibson uses poetic license with abandon.
Commentators
have pointed out that Gibson distorts the character of Pontius
Pilate, making him seem to be a tolerant, benevolent, and fair-minded
judge—when independent non-Christian historical texts indicate
that he was a mean-spirited political opportunist. The film also
portrays Pilate’s wife, Claudia, as a kind of heroine. She is
sympathetic to Jesus and thinks his punishment is unjust; there
is some textual basis for that in the Bible. But Gibson goes beyond
this in his portrayal; at one point in the film, Claudia acts
kindly toward Mary and Mary Magdalene, approaching them with a
gift of linen cloths. Gibson has Mary use them to wipe pools of
blood from the spot where Jesus was flogged by the Romans. Nowhere
are these scenes found in any of the four Gospels. Church historian
Elaine Pagels has said that it is “unthinkable” that Jewish women
would have sought or received any sympathy or succor from the
Romans.
Nor
do the Gospels provide any support for the severe beatings Jesus
receives from the Jewish soldiers and guards who arrest him in
the Garden of Gethsemane prior to those inflicted by the Romans.
In one gruesome scene, as Jewish troops bring Jesus back to Jerusalem
heavily bound, they constantly beat him and at one point, even
throw him off a bridge. There is no account of this in the Gospels.
It is tossed in to underscore the brutality of the captors.
All the Gospels say is that a large
crowd sent by the priests came to the garden to arrest Jesus.
There was a scuffle and Jesus told his disciples to lay down their
swords. (Here as elsewhere, Jesus does not seem to be a part of
his own cultural and religious Jewish milieu; both he and his
followers are consistently characterized as renegades and “other”
than their social environment.) Matthew 26:57 states: “Jesus was
led off under arrest to the house of Caiaphas the High Priest.”
Mark 14:53 reads: “Then they led Jesus away to the High Priest’s
house.” Luke 22:54: “Then they arrested Him and led Him away.”
John’s version in 18:12: “The troops with their commander
and the Jewish police, now arrested Him and secured Him. They
took Him first to Annas... the father-in-law of Caiaphas.”1
Yet
in one gruesome scene, as Jewish troops bring Jesus back to Jerusalem,
heavily bound and subject to continual beating, they throw him
off a bridge. There is no account of this in the Gospels. It is
tossed in to underscore the brutality of the captors.
If Jesus’ abuse by the Jewish guards
did not come from the Scriptures, where did Gibson borrow it?
It comes from the supposed revelations of a Catholic nun and mystic,
Anne Catherine Emmerich. Indeed, much of Passion is taken from
Emmerich’s book first published in 1833, known in English as The
Dolorous Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ. The current edition
proudly asserts on its jacket that it is “the classic account
of Divine Revelation that inspired” the Mel Gibson motion picture.2
Emmerich,
a passionate devotee of the practice of meditating on the “sacred
wounds of Jesus,” describes in the book how, after Jesus was arrested,
he was tightly bound, constantly struck, dragged, and made to
walk with bare feet on jagged rocks. Let us focus on a bridge,
which they soon reached, and which Gibson depicts in the film.
Emmerich states, “I saw our Lord fall twice before He reached
the bridge, and these falls were caused entirely by the barbarous
manner in which the soldiers dragged Him; but when they were half
over the bridge they gave full vent to their brutal inclinations,
and struck Jesus with such violence that they threw Him off the
bridge into the water.... If God had not preserved Him, He must
have been killed by this fall” (p. 71).
I
refer here to this scene only to show that Gibson went far beyond
the texts of the Gospels and inserted nonscriptural events mostly
drawn from Emmerich. Remember that these are the subjective visions
of a psychic-mystic rendered more than 1, 800 years after the
events they concern. I went to see the movie a second time to
see if any credit line is given to the Emmerich book at the end
of the film. I could find none, a glaring omission.
A
good deal of the focus of The Passion of the Christ is on the
flogging (scourging) of Jesus. Two Gospels state simply that Pilate
“had Jesus flogged and handed over to be crucified” (Matthew 27:26,
Mark 15:15). John’s description agrees (19:1-2): “Pilate now took
Jesus and had Him flogged.” Luke’s account (23:16) has Pilate
saying: “I therefore propose to let Him off with a flogging.”
What
the Gospels state matter-of-factly and without narrative elaboration
is luridly expanded by Emmerich: First they used “a species of
thorny stick covered with knots and splinters. The blows from
these sticks tore His flesh to pieces; his blood spouted out...”
(p. 135). Then she describes the use of scourges “composed of
small chains, or straps covered with iron hooks, which penetrated
to the bone and tore off large pieces of flesh at every blow”
(p. 135). Moreover, nowhere do the Gospels describe who watched
the flogging. Emmerich states that “a Jewish mob gathered at a
distance.” Gibson has the high priests watching the brutal flogging
(while a feminine incarnation of Satan looks on with them). Nowhere
is this described in the Bible. Gibson thus goes far beyond the
New Testament account, implying that the Jews and their leaders
were complicit in the brutal beatings of Jesus.
The
New Testament account next states that the high priests and crowd
in the square before Pilate called for the crucifixion of Jesus,
and when given the choice, selected Barrabas to be freed over
Jesus. This is fully depicted in Gibson’s Passion.
The
film, however, is silent about the fact that Jesus, his mother
Mary, Peter, James, and the other disciples as well as the supporters
in the crowds were themselves Jews. In Emmerich and Gibson the
Jews come off as the main enemies of Jesus, provoking the Romans
not only to crucify him, but to torture him and inflict maximum
suffering. I think the point in the film is even more anti-Jewish:
it’s that Pilate tries to placate the Jews with the beatings,
but they won’t be satisfied—some real blood thirstiness here!
Is
The Passion of the Christ anti-Semitic? Yes, flagrantly so, in
my judgment. The Passion repeats the description of the Jews portrayed
in medieval art and Passion Plays, which provoked in no small
measure anti-Semitic pogroms and persecutions suffered by the
“Christ killers” for centuries. Much has been said about the fact
that Mel Gibson’s eighty-five-year-old father, Hutton Gibson,
is a Holocaust denier. He has been quoted as saying that Vatican
II was “a Mason plot backed by the Jews.” Mel Gibson removed from
the subtitles of the original version of his film the statement
from Matthew (27:25-26): “The blood be on us, and on our children,”
though apparently it remains in the spoken Aramaic text.
To
his credit, Pope John Paul II in 2000 made an historic apology,
declaring that the Jews of today cannot be held responsible for
the death of Christ. Still, The Passion debuts at a time when
anti-Semitism is growing worldwide, especially in Europe and throughout
the Islamic world.
According
to scripture (especially the Gospel of John), Christ died on the
cross because God sent His only begotten Son to die for our sins;
thus, all sinners are responsible, not simply the Jews of ancient
Israel. Mel Gibson has himself blamed all sinners for the crucifixion.
If this is the case, the crucifixion of Christ had to happen,
and was for that matter foretold by Him. Why God was willing to
allow His only beloved Son to suffer a horrible death is difficult
to fathom, but according to Christian apologetics it was preordained
so that those who believed in Christ could be saved. Thus it was
God—not the Jews alone or the Romans—who was responsible for the
crucifixion of Jesus. One might even say that if this was part
of a divine plan, the Jews should get the credit for carrying
it out.
Is
the Biblical Account Reliable?
Is
the account of Jesus as described in the New Testament—in this
case of his trial, crucifixion, and death (let alone his birth,
ministry, and resurrection) – an accurate account of historical
events? I doubt it. This negative appraisal is drawn from careful,
scholarly, and scientific examination of the New Testament account.
The key point is the fact that the
authors of the Gospels were not themselves eyewitnesses to the
events described in those documents. If Jesus died about the year
30 C.E. (this is conjectural, since some even question whether
he ever lived3),
the Gospel according to Mark was probably written in the 70s of
the first century; Matthew and Luke in the 80s; and John anywhere
from 90 to 100 C.E. They were thus written some forty to seventy
years after the death of Jesus. The Gospels are based on an oral
tradition, derived at best from second- and third-hand testimony
assembled by the early band of Jewish Christians and including
anecdotal accounts, ill-attributed sayings, stories, and parables.
The Gospels’ claims are not independently corroborated by impartial
observers—all the more reason why some skepticism about their
factual truth is required. They were not written as history or
biography per se—and the authors did not use the methods of careful,
historical scholarship. Rather, they were, according to biblical
scholar Randel Helms, written by missionary propagandists for
the faith, interested in proclaiming the “good news” and in endeavoring
to attract and convert others to Christianity.4)
Hence, the Gospels should not be taken as literally true, but
are a form of special pleading for a new ideological-moral-theological
faith.
In writing the Gospels the authors
evidently looked back to the Old Testament and found passages
that were suggestive of a Messiah who would appear, who was born
of a young woman (or a virgin), and could trace his lineage back
to David—which is why Matthew and Luke made such a fuss about
having Jesus born in Bethlehem. Accordingly, the Gospels should
be read as works of literary art, spun out of the creative imagination
in order to fulfill passionate yearnings for salvation. They are
the most influential form of fiction that has dominated Western
culture throughout its history. Whether there is any core of truth
to them is questionable; for it is difficult to verify the actual
facts, particularly since there is no mention of Jesus or of his
miraculous healings in any extant non-Christian literature.5
Tradition has it that Mark heard
about Jesus from Peter. Eusebius (260-339 C.E.) is one source
for this claim, but Eusebius wrote some three centuries after
the death of Jesus. In any case, Matthew and Luke most likely
base their accounts on Mark.6
The three synoptic Gospels are similar, though they contradict
each other on a number of significant events. Scholars believe
that some of these were derived from still another literary source
(Q, for quelle in German, or “source”) that has been lost.
Another
historical fact to bear in mind is that the Gospels were written
after a protracted war between the Romans and the Jews (66-74
C.E.), which saw the destruction of Jerusalem and of the Temple
(70 C.E.). Hundreds of thousands of Jews were killed in these
wars and were dispersed throughout the Mediterranean world. Jerusalem
was eventually leveled in 135 C.E. The synoptic Gospels were influenced
by the political conditions at the times of the various authors
who wrote the Gospels, not during the years of Jesus. John’s Gospel,
written somewhat later, reflected the continuing growth of Christianity
in his day. The other book attributed to John, Revelations, which
is so influential today, predicts the apocalyptic end of the world,
the Rapture, and the Second Coming of Jesus. This book in the
view of many scholars reflects the ruminations of a disturbed
personality. We have no reliable evidence that these events will
occur in the future, yet hundreds of millions of people today
are convinced that they will – on the basis of sheer faith.
Let
us consider another part of the historical context in the latter
part of the first century, when most of the New Testament was
composed. Two Jewish sects contended for dominance. First was
Rabbinic Judaism, which followed the Torah with all its commandments
and rituals (including circumcision and dietary laws). Drawing
on the Old Testament, Rabbinic Judaism held that the Jews were
the “chosen people.” Once slaves in Egypt, they had escaped to
the Promised Land of Palestine. Someday after the Diaspora the
Jews would be returned to Israel, and the Temple would be rebuilt.
The second sect was early Jewish Christianity, which attempted
to appeal not only to Jews but to pagans in the Roman Empire.
It could do so effectively only by breaking with Rabbinic Judaism.
This is the reason for increasing negative references in the Gospels
to “the Jews” (especially in John), blaming them for the crucifixion
of Jesus. Christianity was able to make great strides in recruiting
converts and competing with other sects, such as the Mithraic
religion. But it could only do so by disassociating itself from
Rabbinic Judaism. It developed a more universal message, which,
incidentally, was already implicit in the letters of Paul (written
some fifteen to twenty years after the crucifixion of Jesus):
the new Christians did not need to be circumcised nor to practice
Judaic dietary laws.
Thus,
the biblical texts drawn on in The Passion of the Christ should
not be read literally as diatribes against the Jews per se, but
rather as the record of a dispute among two Jewish sects competing
for ascendancy—between traditional and Christianized Judaism.
If
one reads the four Gospels side by side, as I have done numerous
times, one finds many omissions and contradictions. Evidently,
their writers never knew Jesus in his own lifetime. Each Gospel
was crafted post hoc to satisfy the immediate practical needs
of the new Christian churches then developing. They were contrived
by human beings, motivated by the transcendental temptation to
believe in Christ as the Son of God and the Savior of mankind.
The Gospels thus are historically unreliable, and insofar as The
Passion of the Christ used them, it is also. But Gibson goes even
beyond the Gospels, as I have indicated.
The
Establishment of Christianity
I
submit that there are two important inferences to draw from this
analysis: first, the union of a religious creed with political
power can be extremely destructive, especially when that creed
is supported by the power of the state or the empire. It was the
conversion of the Emperor Constantine (around 312 C.E.) that led
to the establishment of Christianity as the official religion
of the Roman Empire, some three centuries after the crucifixion
of Jesus. The “Nicene Creed,” which was the product of the counsel
of Nicaea (convened in 325 C.E.), said that Jesus was crucified
under Pontius Pilate. It also declared Jesus the divine Son of
God “in one substance” with the Father. The decision which books
should be included in the New Testament was political, determined
by the vote of the bishops attending the council of Nicaea. At
this and other church councils, various apocryphal books revered
by particular Christian communities were omitted from the canonical
scriptures. So much for historic objectivity.
By
the fifth century more and more of the inhabitants of the Roman
Empire became members of Christian churches, which replaced pagan
religions. Christianity reigned supreme across Europe, North Africa,
and the Middle East. The latter two were overrun by the Muslims
in the seventh and eighth centuries, but feudal Europe remained
stolidly Christian as it entered into the so-called Dark Ages.
Only with the Renaissance, the Reformation, the development of
science, and the democratic revolutions of our time was the hegemony
of Christianity weakened. The secularization of modern society
brought in its wake naturalistic ideas and humanist values.
The
union of religion and political power has generated terrible religious
conflicts historically, pitting Catholics against Protestants,
opposing Jihadists versus Crusaders, and triggering constant wars
among Christians, Jews, Muslims, Hindus, and others. God save
us from God-intoxicated legions that have the power to enforce
their convictions on those who disagree! All the more reason to
laud the wisdom of the authors of the American Constitution who
enacted the Bill of Rights, including the First Amendment, prohibiting
the establishment of a religion.
Freedom
of Inquiry
The
second inference to be drawn is that the origins of the Christian
legend have for too long lay unexamined, buried by the sands of
time. The New Testament was taken by believers as given, and no
one was permitted to question its sacred doctrines allegedly based
on revelations from on high. But skepticism is called for—the
same skepticism that should also be applied to the alleged revelations
received by Moses on Mount Sinai and other prophets of the Old
Testament. Orthodox Jews who accept the legend of a “chosen people”
and the promise that God gave Israel to the Jews likewise base
this conviction on uncorroborated testimony. Today, we have the
tools of historical scholarship, biblical criticism, and science.
We can draw upon two centuries of sophisticated scholarly and
scientific inquiries. We can apply circumstantial evidence, archaeology,
linguistic analysis, and textual criticism to authenticate or
disconfirm the veracity of ancient literary documents. Regrettably,
the general public is almost totally unaware of this important
research. The case is similar for the revelations of Muhammad
and the origins of Islam in the Qur’an. Since they are similarly
uncorroborated by independent eyewitnesses, they rest on similarly
questionable foundations. There is again a rich literature of
skeptical scrutiny. But most scholars are fearful of expressing
their dissenting conclusions.
The
so-called books of Abraham—the Old and New Testaments and the
Qur’an—need to be scrutinized using rational and scientific analysis.
And the results of these inquiries need to leave the academy and
to be read and digested more widely. Unfortunately, freedom of
inquiry has rarely been applied to the foundations of the “sacred
texts.” Indeed, until recently severe punishment of religious
dissenters was the norm in many parts of the world.
Given
the tremendous box-office success of Mel Gibson’s film, there
are bound to be other Jesus movies produced — for Jesus sells
in America! The Passion of the Christ unfortunately may add to
intolerance of dissenters; and this may severely endanger the
fragility of social peace. It may further help to undermine the
First Amendment's prohibition of the establishment of religion,
which has been the mainstay of American democracy. This indeed
is the most worrisome fallout that the Gibson film is likely to
produce.
Notes
1.
These
translations are from The New English Bible (Cambridge,
U.K.: Cambridge University Press, 1961).
2.
Anne
Catherine Emmerich, The Dolorous Passion of Our Lord Jesus
Christ, tr. ed. Klemens Maria Brentano (El Sobrante, Calif.:
North Bay Books, 2003). I am indebted to my colleague Joe Nickell
for pointing the book out to me.
3.
See:
George Wells, Did Jesus Exist? (Amherst, N.Y.: Prometheus
Books, 1980).
4.
Randel
Helms, Gospel Fictions (Amherst, N.Y.: Prometheus Books,
1988).
5.
R.
Joseph Hoffmann, Jesus Outside the Gospels (Amherst,
N.Y.: Prometheus Books, 1984).
6.
John
Dominic Crossan, Who Killed Jesus? Exposing the Roots of Anti-Semitism
in the Gospel Story of the Death of Jesus (San Francisco:
Harper, 1995). |