I wonder how many fundamentalists are going to see this film. Personally, I would not recommend it for several reasons:
1. Pervasive Catholic influence
Here is an interesting quote from the New York Times (Feb. 5, 2004):
Oh, but it’s just for the realistic depiction of the torture and death of Christ on the cross. Yes, that is right but such scenes are not Biblical. When it comes to objectionable elements (e.g., profanity, scatological realism, erotic realism, sexual perversion, lurid violence, occultism, and erroneous religious or philosophical assumptions), we need to let the Bible teach us how to depict those things in a Christ-honoring manner. The only way to do that is to follow the Bible’s example. The Holy Spirit did not depict the gore involved in the crucifixion in explicit detail like the film does. Certainly, the written descriptions could have been just as vivid if (1) it was appropriate and (2) it was how God wanted to reveal the crucifixion to us. BJU Press has an in depth and helpful article on the Biblical Approach to Objectionable Elements online HERE.
3. The film violates the 3rd Commandment
I am in the minority here but I have serious concerns about physical depictions of God and, by extension, likenesses of Christ. For example, I tolerate in church, but do not appreciate, flannel graph pictures of Christ. This film goes a step beyond that and brings to life a particular version of Christ that is not accurate. We are to worship Christ as He is revealed in the Scriptures, not a version of Christ that is dreamed up by man.
4. My understanding is that the film downplays the resurrection
I may be wrong here but I have heard that it does not include the resurrection. Does anyone know if that is true? A film that concentrates on the crucifixion without climaxing with the resurrection does the true gospel an injustice.
Andy
1. Pervasive Catholic influence
Here is an interesting quote from the New York Times (Feb. 5, 2004):
And then there is this warning from James While (www.aomin.org):Although Mr. Gibson is Roman Catholic and the movie is replete with Catholic touches, like the Stations of the Cross and the centrality of Mary, influential Pentecostal and evangelical leaders have embraced it anyway, seeing its value as a tool in evangelism.
2. The film is rated RPrediction. Fast forward three years. EWTN's "Coming Home Network" show. Some former "evangelical" woman is on the screen, and she says, "Well, I had never even thought of the Catholic faith, until I saw The Passion film, and I was so taken by the portrayal of Mary that I went looking on the web for more information, and found Anne Catherine Emmerich's book, The Dolorous Passion , and that is when I realized there was so much more to Mary than what I had been taught. And then I found out sola scriptura isn't true and then I read Karl Keating's book and then...(fill in the rest with the standard template conversion story)."
Oh, but it’s just for the realistic depiction of the torture and death of Christ on the cross. Yes, that is right but such scenes are not Biblical. When it comes to objectionable elements (e.g., profanity, scatological realism, erotic realism, sexual perversion, lurid violence, occultism, and erroneous religious or philosophical assumptions), we need to let the Bible teach us how to depict those things in a Christ-honoring manner. The only way to do that is to follow the Bible’s example. The Holy Spirit did not depict the gore involved in the crucifixion in explicit detail like the film does. Certainly, the written descriptions could have been just as vivid if (1) it was appropriate and (2) it was how God wanted to reveal the crucifixion to us. BJU Press has an in depth and helpful article on the Biblical Approach to Objectionable Elements online HERE.
3. The film violates the 3rd Commandment
I am in the minority here but I have serious concerns about physical depictions of God and, by extension, likenesses of Christ. For example, I tolerate in church, but do not appreciate, flannel graph pictures of Christ. This film goes a step beyond that and brings to life a particular version of Christ that is not accurate. We are to worship Christ as He is revealed in the Scriptures, not a version of Christ that is dreamed up by man.
4. My understanding is that the film downplays the resurrection
I may be wrong here but I have heard that it does not include the resurrection. Does anyone know if that is true? A film that concentrates on the crucifixion without climaxing with the resurrection does the true gospel an injustice.
Andy