American
Christianity is buzzing with questions, debates, and reviews
about Mel Gibson’s latest blood and guts movie. Many are asking,
“Should I go to see it, or is it right to go to the theater
and watch this movie?” I myself have been quite intrigued with
the “conservative Christian” response to this movie. I have
been shocked at how many Christian leaders have gone to see
the movie, so they can “answer all the questions” that come
to them. I think that most of our readers already know how I
feel about such a sacrilegious display of the holiest scenes
in human history. However, it seems like a fitting time to pay
my respects to movies, and the dangers of drama one more time.
I too have been bombarded with questions about
the right and wrong of this movie, and whether a sincere
God-fearing Christian should go to it. We on the editorial
staff found this old article written by A. W. Tozer over
fifty years
ago, and thought its content is worth reading in 2004. Tozer
was right on, fifty years ago, and much more so today. We
have
selected a few pages out of the entire article and placed them
below for your meditations.
I read an article recently that said preachers
must make the multimedia adjustments to their ministries, or
they will soon have no people listening to their sermons. Oh,
how far we have fallen. I for one agree with John Wesley who
said, “If the preacher is full of the fire of God, then people
will gather just to watch him burn.”
Maybe my thoughts are too late for some of
you, but I feel moved by the Lord to sound the alarm anyway.
If you are still halting between two opinions, here are my thoughts
about the movie.
"The Passion of the Christ" is not an accurate
scriptural account of Christ’s passion recorded in any of
the translations of the Bible. Christ was not beaten all
the way
to Calvary. Simon and Jesus did not jointly carry the cross.
Mary did not wipe up the blood of Christ after He was beaten.
Moreover, Jesus did not pray because He was afraid to go to
the cross; He prayed in agony. All these things and more were
added, to make the movie more interesting. Drama has to do
this
to make a “good” movie.
There is no preaching in the movie. It seems
to me, if the producer’s burden was to reach the lost, he
would have found a creative way to put a clear gospel presentation
in it. We all know that this kind of activity will cut way
down on the Box Office figures. Let us remember God’s heart
has not changed. “It pleased God by the foolishness of
preaching to save them that believe.” (I Cor. 1:21b)
Hollywood is Hollywood. It is rotten to the
core. Satan has used the movie industry to defile generations
of Americans as well as others in the rest of the nations. Don’t
give Hollywood a dollar of support even if one movie has some
good in it. You will see more movies like this one, because
the producers are learning they can lure the conservatives into
the theaters with “good movies.” Money is the name of the game.
Let us remember the foundation of Hollywood is sex, rape, murder,
and violence. We Christians should have nothing to do with
any of it.
The movie is packed full of emotions, but
has very little conviction which comes as the Spirit of
God convicts
people of their need of repentance. Many people come out of
the theaters weeping, but remember, they do the same thing
with
every other touching movie. Emotions are deceitful. They make
you feel very spiritual, but if the will does not change,
the
life will not change. We need some good, old-fashioned discernment.
Many Christians today are calling emotional feelings “the
Spirit of God.” This is a very dangerous deception. They
are doing it in the worship service as well. Lots of mushy
songs of “I
love you Lord” bring deep feelings of emotion. However, that
is not the Spirit of God.
The world is running after this movie en masse.
It is making multiplied millions for all who are involved.
This
spells danger to me. That which is highly esteemed among men
is an abomination to God. Why does the world enjoy something
that is supposed to be so spiritual? Maybe it is not as holy
as we think it is. If this movie were a holy, heavenly anointed
presentation of the passion of Christ, it would convict people
of their sin, rebellion, and unbelief. If the movie did in
deed
convict them, they would not want to go there, just like they
don’t want to go to church.
Drama is drama. It is play-acting. The people
involved in the movie are living and acting out lies. They are
playing parts that are absolutely not who they are in real
life. This is the greatest problem with drama. It is unreal
people acting out hypocrisy. In the case of “The Passion of
the Christ,” it is the ultimate hypocrisy. Who would dare to
play the part of our holy God dying for the sins of humanity?
This is sacrilegious.
This movie is causing sincere, conservative
Christians to compromise, and step over the threshold of the
movie theater for the first time in their life. Multitudes have
done this. I know they had twinges of conviction as they walked
through the door, and sat down in the seats for the first time.
This is probably the greatest grief to me. They have soothed
their crying conscience by saying it is a “good movie about
Christ.” Preachers have done this. Good men who have stood for
right many years are doing this. They are justifying their actions
by saying they need to know how to answer the many questions
that come.
I fear this movie will make the multitudes
love another Jesus with a fuzzy kind of love that does not require
repentance or commitment. If the whole worldly world and the
religious world are “in love with this Jesus” this can easily
prepare the way for another Christ whom the Bible calls the
Anti-Christ.
Lastly, the movie opens the door for more ecumenical
activities between Catholics and Protestants. Where is our discernment?
So Mel Gibson is a “conservative Catholic.” He is also a Hollywood
producer who has filmed hours of sex, violence and rebellion.
Would the real Christians please get some clear discernment
about these things?
Well, there are many other points that could
be added to these nine points, but I think this is enough for
anyone who is sincerely seeking God’s direction about the latest
movie. Consider some of Tozer’s thoughts written fifty years
ago.
Bro Denny
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