THE MCJ

Christian scholarship is the Church’s prodigious invention to defend itself against the Bible. - Søren Kierkegaard

AND NOW...IDIOTS

Near as I can figure, Dan Handschy, the rector of the Episcopal Church of the Advent in Crestwood, Missouri, a few miles southwest of here, didn't much care for The Passion of the Christ because it was too...um...real:

Many movie-goers say that "The Passion of the Christ" moves them to contemplate just how much Christ suffered for their redemption and the forgiveness of their sins. It makes one wonder just what sins they might be guilty of that can only be lifted from them through such brutality.

Murder, stealing, adultery, false witness, sexual immorality, the whole shootin' match.  Good Episcopalian that he is, Handschy's sins can apparently be taken care of over a bottle of port or a couple of snifters of VSOP Cognac so I can see why he was confused.

The film treated the suffering of the Christ, and suffering in general, in a reductionist manner. We live in an age that has confused truth with factuality. What is factual is true; what is true must first be factual. Gibson wants us to think that he presents to us The Passion of the Christ as brutal fact devoid of interpretation: this is what happened.

Apparently, Dan Handschy may or may not be the rector of the Church of the Advent.  I'll have to get back to you on that.

Gibson's theology of the atonement is terrifyingly objective. My sins are a fact, and so the Christ's suffering has to be a fact. There is absolutely no room in Gibson's economy of salvation for relationship.

Great works of art, be they visual, musical or literary, always raise more questions than they answer.  And right now, in my head, one question is forcing its way to the front of a long line of questions, knocking some questions to the ground and elbowing others out of its way, completely ignoring the anger of the other questions, demanding an answer and refusing to leave until it receives one:

What in the name of William Sancroft is Handschy talking about?!!

Are sins no longer facts in the Episcopal Church?  Okay, stupid question.  But what on earth does “relationship” have to do with anything here?  What should Gibson have done?  Have Jesus name every single person in the entire world from the Crucifixion until the end of the age, for whom He died?  That might have made for a longish movie.

The dialog in the movie, such as it was, is strained and shows no depth of character. Even the flashbacks felt forced: tableaus, objects separate from us, completely reified. The vengeful cries of the Jews, the brutality of the soldiers, the indecision of Pilate, even the compassion of Veronica and Simon of Cyrene are devoid of context; they are in the story because they have to be, they fit the plot line of the Stations of the Cross.

Dan.  Buddy.  What was the name of the movie you saw?  You know, the one that you're reviewing here.  It was entitled The Passion of the Christ, wasn't it?  Know why the movie is called that, Dan? 

Because.  It.  Was.  A.  Movie.  Of.  The.  Last.  Twelve.  Hours.  Of.  The.  Life.  Of.  Jesus.  Christ.

The final moment of the movie only served to isolate the events depicted even deeper into a sterile factuality. We see the grave clothes of the Christ sinking into place, empty of the body they had just recently shrouded. The camera pulls back and we see the face of the Christ, smiling. And the movie ends. The resurrected Jesus appears to no one. There is no redeeming relationship.

Okay, I'll grant that.  After the ordeal that The Passion is, it would have been a relief to see Mary Magdalene's reaction to seeing her risen Lord or John's or Peter's or those two guys on the road to Emmaus.  But what was the title of the movie again, Dan?

This sets up a terrible quid pro quo. The brutalization and death of the Christ have nothing to do with relationship[Please stop saying “relationship” so often], nothing to do with injustice or opposition to Empire. They are simply fact. That means that the sins of the world must simply be fact (since the Christ suffered for the forgiveness of sins).

Which He did.  This, ladies and gentlemen, is why there are Reformations.  Why don't you just start sleeping in Sundays, Dan?  There really is no reason for you to haul yourself out of bed on your day off. 

Sin is reified and divorced from relationship[stop it] and context.

I've got no clue why Handschy thinks that sin against God needs to be considered in “relationship and context.”  None whatsoever.

And the only way to be rid of sin, whatever it may be, is through brutality! Whenever relationship[shut up] is broken, and we objectify an other, brutality not only becomes possible, but necessary.

I'd quote some Scripture here on why the Messiah had to suffer and die(there are lots of verses) but since BrainHandschy probably doesn't own a Bible, it would be a waste of time.

This is the deep flaw in Gibson's economy of atonement. I left the movie deeply grieved.

Christianity tends to do that to people like you.

The Passion and Resurrection of the Christ as presented by Mel Gibson may have the status of factuality, but they are certainly not true.

They can only be true when interpreted in the context of relationship[will you PLEASE shut up?!], broken and restored. Gibson's film leaves no room for the restoration of any relationship[AAAAAUUUUGGHH!!] at all.

Oh dear Lord, I need a break from these people.

Posted on 4/1/2004 1:03:30 AM , 46 comments

Submitted by Geoffrey at 4/1/2004 1:39:41 AM

Alas, another bold statement from one of our fine "Oasis" parishes.
Submitted by J. Scott at 4/1/2004 3:32:08 AM

Wow! - even the lower orders of the Piskie clergy speak Mordorian!
Submitted by John at 4/1/2004 3:34:30 AM

You missed this bit:
"nothing to do with injustice or opposition to Empire "

Opposition to Empire? Injustice? Isn't the whole point that Jesus came suffering, not with a sword to sort out the Romans? Isn't the whole point that the Bible says-Oh, never mind.
Submitted by Ellen at 4/1/2004 4:20:18 AM

I think I'll go see it again. Holy Week is coming up and and I feel like deepening my relationship with Jesus. If Rev. Handschy preaches like he writes, I'd get nothing from him but a headache.
Submitted by Patrick at 4/1/2004 4:27:57 AM

Did all these guys have the same public speaking professor at seminary?

What a load of gibberish!
Submitted by Dale Price at 4/1/2004 6:30:30 AM

Sadly, Rev. Handschy, you are the one guilty of objectification here, in your refusal to embrace this film in its brokenness. You need to engage in a process of discernment, understanding first that we are for each other's salvation.

You need to accept the otherness of the film, and see that many others have established profound relationship with TPOTC. In fact, the quality of such relationships offers them the opportunity for mutual care and self-giving that exceeds that we associate with such films as "Secretary."

It is important to realize here that in many areas of the church, particularly urban areas, a love of the film is a very ordinary reality.

I would note here that it is part of the reality of the Episcopal Church that we live with divergent points of view regarding the film and understandings of the work of the Holy Spirit in the life of the church.

Ultimately, it is essential that you realize that the Spirit is doing something new here.

That, and you have to accept that the film is subject to alternate episcopal oversight.

For real.
Submitted by Sarah at 4/1/2004 6:39:13 AM

Wow! What a complete load of total garbage. This part takes the cake:

"The Passion and Resurrection of the Christ as presented by Mel Gibson may have the status of factuality, but they are certainly not true."

Silly me. I though that an idea was true if it lined up with the way things actually are (reality). Apparently this guy is living in an alternate universe where something can be both factual and false.

Oh and Dale - hilarious!
Submitted by Bret at 4/1/2004 7:28:39 AM

Dale - :)))))) Great!!!!!!!!!!!!!

As for the "reverend".....if he says "relationship" or "context" one more time...........I'm gonna take off from work, fly to St. Louis, find Chris J, and we're gonna pay the "reverend" a visit and paint his fool episcobabble tongue black! Oy vey, what a schlemiel that "reverend" is!
Submitted by Paul at 4/1/2004 7:32:42 AM

I am a Catholic priest and I thought WE were the worst homilists!
Submitted by Paul at 4/1/2004 7:32:44 AM

I am a Catholic priest and I thought WE were the worst homilists!
Submitted by billhedrick at 4/1/2004 8:26:10 AM

1Cr 1:23 But we preach Christ crucified, unto the Jews a stumblingblock, and unto the Greeks foolishness;
Submitted by Jackson at 4/1/2004 8:29:11 AM

Of course he has no understanding of the "context" of the movie since that would require him to crack open a bible.

Also:

reify: verb : consider an abstract concept to be real

Sin is merely an abstract concept? Please pray for this man’s flock.
Submitted by Ed the Roman at 4/1/2004 9:00:12 AM

"...speak Mordorian"

That would be the Black Speech, properly. And reified.
Submitted by Lou Ann at 4/1/2004 9:07:19 AM

I have seen the TPOTC twice. At both viewings I was struck with by the relationships. The relationship of Christ to Mary, Peter, John, Mary Magdelene, Caiphas, Pilate, Simon of Cyrene, etc... as people. The relationship of Christ's suffering and death to my sin and the sins of the world.

If Rector Handschy can't see a relationship between his sin and Christ's death perhaps he should find another line of work.
Submitted by Ken at 4/1/2004 9:57:42 AM

"terrifyingly objective" says it all.

Reality is scarey. Sadly, a mind like Handschy seems unable or unwilling to trust the providence of a loving God who objectively came as man and objectively died for the sin of Adam, which stains us all, and for all the sins birthed from that one sin. Better to prattle on meaninglessly about "relationships", as though they existed apart from real people and real circumstances.

I have to pick at one thing: the lack of context around Veronica is the point. She was simply a woman who did a kind act. What's so hard to grasp about that? Isn't that what people like Handschy concern themselves with?

He's right about the resurrection scene, though. The movie would have been better without it, perhaps with a tag line from the creed: "on the third day He rose again according to the scriptures.". OTOH, I would cheerfully have sat through another 5 minutes of the women finding the empty tomb or encountering Jesus in the garden.
Submitted by Ed the Roman at 4/1/2004 10:32:22 AM

Handschy's biggest problem IMHO is that he cannot see that Jesus came to reconcile us to the God who dwells in inapproachable light, and only through that reconciliation to reconcile us with each other. That primary reconciliation is not depictable as a conversation between humans, and he can't stand that the film doesn't do it.
Submitted by Ken at 4/1/2004 11:12:45 AM

AND FURTHERMORE! Here's what I have to say to the Reverend Mr. Handschy:

Glory be to Jesus,
who in bitter pains
poured for me the life blood
from his sacred veins!

Grace and life eternal
in that blood I find,
blest be his compassion
infinitely kind!

Blest through endless ages
be the precious stream
which from endless torment
doth the world redeem!

There the fainting spirit
drinks of life her fill;
there, as in a fountain,
laves herself at will.

Abel's blood for vengeance
pleaded to the skies;
but the blood of Jesus
for our pardon cries.

Oft as it is sprinkled
on our guilty hearts,
Satan in confusion
terror-struck departs;

oft as earth exulting
wafts its praise on high,
angel hosts, rejoicing,
make their glad reply.

Lift ye then your voices;
swell the mighty flood;
louder still and louder
praise the precious blood.
Submitted by jh at 4/1/2004 11:52:21 AM

'It makes one wonder just what sins they might be guilty of that can only be lifted from them through such brutality.'

Whatever they might be, Dan, they don't likely include passing off one's atheistic leanings as Christian ministry (FRAUD), and passing the collection plate to support it (THEFT). Lesser crimes than you probably imagine of those dastardly believers, but you're in for a sad surprise when it comes to the penalty phase.

Also, Dan, blindness isn't a crime, but since you say you can see...
Submitted by Bud at 4/1/2004 1:10:36 PM

Evidently, the divinity schools don't teach much theology or church history anymore. What Rev. Handschy is espousing is very close to the old Pelagian heresy. The idea that an Atonement is required, that it was necessary for Christ to pay our sin-debt would be naturally repugnant to him. After all, "grace" is just something freely provided by God, little moral innstructions on what we should do through "reason." This "grace" is offered equally to all. There is no original sin. What men and women need is not a new birth, but just the example of Christ's moral teachings. We can take it from there.
Submitted by Dale Price at 4/1/2004 1:55:40 PM

Alas, would that the problem of the Griswoldians was merely Pelagianism.

If so, that would be a galactic leap towards Christian orthodoxy.
Submitted by bwk at 4/1/2004 2:16:22 PM

Ken said "I would cheerfully have sat through another 5 minutes of the women finding the empty tomb or encountering Jesus in the garden". Ditto here.

re the graphic brutality: I have always found it difficult to apprehend how Christ embraced the crucifixion. Somehow, the graphic brutality and that scene of Jesus embracing the cross, acted in contrast to bring into focus for me His Passion; like in the way the two lenses of 3D glasses, when separated, bring in to focus a 3D image. In this way I thought the movie really lived up to it's title.

For anyone seeking some more keyboard head bashing on this topic, check out the review of TPOTC on the Heretical Diocese of New Westminster's webpage by a professor of the local official seminary;
http://www.vancouver.anglican.ca/default.asp? Menu=0&SubMenu=0&Item=0&Content=NEWS&Mode=NEW&Article=602
Submitted by Phil Swain at 4/1/2004 2:26:50 PM

"When a man says of what is that it is and of what is not that it is not, he speaks the truth." Aristotle

"We live in an age that has confused truth with factuality." Handschy
Submitted by Christopher Hathaway at 4/1/2004 2:48:03 PM

Maybe Paul meant that it would be foolishness to the GEEKS.

This man believes in truth without facts. I bet he preaches sermons without a message to a church without believers. Maybe on the last day he can comfort himself by saying "these flames aren't true", but I bet they'll still burn a tad.
Submitted by DeeBee at 4/1/2004 3:32:59 PM

Re: Ken: "I would cheerfully have sat through another 5 minutes of the women finding the empty tomb or encountering Jesus in the garden."

Mel? Sequel?? Pleeeeeeze????

(I never thought I'd beg for a movie sequel!)
Submitted by Gayle at 4/1/2004 3:48:10 PM

Please would someone make them shut up, please....

The problem is that they are making my little old lady Southern Baptist mother-in-law right in her comments about the Episcopal church that I drug her son into 20 years ago.

The hymn that's been going through my mind is "beneath the cross of Jesus".

Upon that cross of Jesus mine eye at times can see
The very dying form of One Who suffered there for me;
And from my stricken heart with tears two wonders I confess;
The wonders of redeeming love and my unworthiness.

I take, O cross, thy shadow for my abiding place;
I ask no other sunshine than the sunshine of His face;
Content to let the world go by to know no gain or loss,
My sinful self my only shame, my glory all the cross.


Submitted by Russ+ at 4/1/2004 3:50:57 PM

I know why this guy hates this movie so much. The clue is in his overuse of the word "relationships"... The film lacked any "warm fuzzy" feel good stuff.

Once again, the theraputic model of 60's Christianity can't even reckon itself with its own theology or the reality of sin!
Submitted by ann r at 4/1/2004 5:00:41 PM

This guy lacks a relationship with Jesus.
Submitted by bwk at 4/1/2004 5:12:41 PM

Yes, Russ+, I believe you've nailed it.

One more comment I'ld like to add to my above post,
Handschy "..left the movie deeply grieved". Yes, I too felt grief, but overwhelmed with joy by that so palpable "3D image" of His Passion that the movie brought out. Since watching it, I have been eagerly waiting for Easter, expressed so well in the hymn posted by Gayle. Thanks for that.
Submitted by Edward at 4/1/2004 7:37:25 PM

Ken: "I would cheerfully have sat through another 5 minutes of the women finding the empty tomb or encountering Jesus in the garden."

Oh, yes - the moment when the Magdalene realises that *she's not talking to the gardener* is the most heartbreakingly joyful in all Scripture. But, as Christopher rightly points out, the film is called "The Passion," not "The Resurrection." Sequel? Oh, by all means!

Dale Price: Agreed, absolutely. Pelagius was very clear, as even his fiercest opponents admitted, that sin is a real problem which must be fought against by every Christian. He also belived in the Passion and Resurrection, without doubt of any kind. The Griswolds, Robinsons and Handschys have an almost infinite distance to go before they are as orthodox as Pelagius!
Submitted by JW in NC at 4/1/2004 9:40:04 PM

What comes to MY mind is "Ah, Holy Jesus":

Who was the guilty?
Who brought this upon Thee?
Alas, my treason
Jesus, hath undone Thee.
T'was I, Lord Jesus
I it was denied Thee.
I crucified Thee!

Lo the Good Shepherd
for His sheep is offered.
The slave hath sinn'ed
and the Son hath suffered,
for our atonement,
when we nothing heeded,
God interceded.
Submitted by Baillie at 4/1/2004 9:52:28 PM

There's some nice relationships in "The Brave Little Toaster". Courage, noble self-sacrifice, cuddling...maybe that would suit him better.
Submitted by Oengus Moonbones at 4/1/2004 11:13:15 PM

Christopher S. Johnson: “Oh dear Lord, I need a break from these people.”

May I recommend a long fishing trip? A cruise in the Caribbean? Or even a long refreshing vacation in North Idaho would be good. I live in North Idaho and Spring time here is just great. Although I have never been there, I imagine there are plenty of really nice places in Missouri. For the sake of you health and sanity, you really need to take a break.
Submitted by Ken at 4/1/2004 11:31:01 PM

Griswold and company are gnostics, a much more serious heresy than pelagianism (not that any heresy isn't serious). You really want to ask Gene Robinson, "Did Jesus come in the flesh?"
Submitted by MC from CA at 4/2/2004 12:49:28 AM

"Relationship" -- A major milestone in my decaying relationship with ECUSA came one morning in a cathedral when the celebrant (a woman) who had been freely butchering the text of Rite II to suit her personal tastes, got to the line of Eucharistic Prayer B "in the fullness of time put all things in subjection under your Christ" (a paraphrase of a verse from Hebrews). She hesitated and then said instead, "in the fullness of time bring all things into relationship with Christ."

Can I borrow that sign with the head banging against the keyboard?
Submitted by G.Scott Bissett at 4/2/2004 5:37:06 AM

Here in Texas we refer to Handschy's homily as a bunch of bovine feces. Hate to be brutal.
Submitted by Donald R. McClarey at 4/2/2004 6:14:35 AM

No amount of blather and clergyspeak can disguise the fear. Clerics like Handschy realize that the popularity of the Passion indicates the hunger of people for historic Christianity. The attempt by clerics like him during the last 50 years to erect a new religion has failed. He and his ilk are doomed to be an unpleasant footnote in the history of Christianity. It is an understandable response that he fears this and attempts to deny the power of the truth behind the Passion.
Submitted by MJD_NV at 4/2/2004 8:23:10 AM

"Gibson's theology of the atonement is terrifyingly objective."

Hmmm, Gibson shows us the Truth of Jesus, Handschy finds that "Terrifying."

Yep, Donald McClarey, I'd say you nailed it. Scared out of their wits by Truth.
Submitted by Sue at 4/2/2004 8:23:17 AM

Also at the Dio of MO website (www.missouri.anglican.org) one can find Heidi Clark’s dissection (her word) of “The Passion”. Heidi is on the senior staff of the diocese as Coordinator for Christian Education and Youth.
Go figure.
Submitted by Sleepless in SC at 4/2/2004 8:24:13 AM

Chris, having followed and enjoyed, but never contributed to, your MCJ commentaries, I just "had" to say something about Handschy's review. First of all, I assume it was not a revisionist April Fools prank. It's hard to tell these days just when they are making fun of the faithful with their inane comments. If it was not, Handschy has unequivocally moved into first place in a compendium of examples I have been assembling to make a self-evident, "read-it-all-in-one-place" case for how far our ECUSA church leaders have departed from the faith. Now that I think of it, even our ECUSA "leaders" might be offended to be included in the same class with this fellow! Thanks for the post. Keep up the good work.
Submitted by Christopher Johnson at 4/2/2004 9:03:14 AM

MC from CA,

Be my guest. Someone sent it to me.
Submitted by Christopher Hathaway at 4/2/2004 9:09:58 AM

Ken,
I agree whole heartedly that Gene and his merry band are gnostics, but they are gnostics with a strong modern materialistic twist. They believe so strongly in the demands of the body and of sex that they can't be asked to act against their flesh, while at the same time being totally free from the natural design of the body and any unpleasnt consequences of misuse.

Thus celicacy is absurd because sex is ABSOLUTELY CRITICAL to the life of an individual yet what you do with your body has NOTHING to do with your relationship to God.

With this kind of reasoning it's no wonder sodomy can look sacramental.
Submitted by Allen Lewis at 4/2/2004 9:48:57 AM

I went out to the Dio of Missouri website to read the reviews posted there. Of 9 posts, 2 were made by people who had not seen the movie. There were 3 "positive" reviews and 4 "negative" reviews, including Handshy's.

Someone above mentioned Heidi Clark's review. Clark demonstrates why Christian Education in the Episcopal Church is so lacking. She makes the complaint that there are not enough "flashbacks" to explain why Jesus is being treated this way. While I agree with her on that point, does she really believe that people who go to see this film are ignorant of the story of Jesus? Whose fault is that, Heidi?

Then she says she can't see how anyone could imagine the film being an outreach opportunity. Since when was this film supposed to be an outreach opportunity? I'm sure that some people might have considered it such, but Gibson stated from the start that he was interested in telling the story of the last 12 hour's of Christ's life. He was not making an outreach film!

The rest of the negative reviews were similar to Handschy's in that the authors were offended that it was not a different kind of film. One gets the idea that they would rather not have this story told at all.

I've got a question for these people: if the Passion story is of such minor significance, why is it that in all four Gospels, the account of the Passion makes up somewhere between 25-35% of the entire book? As for post=ressurection accounts, only Luke and John's accounts have any significant amount of these recorded. Indeed, Mark's Gospel probably ended with no record of the resurrection at all.

So where's the beef for these reviewers? It has just got to be, as others have pointed out, that these people want a nice "tame" Jesus; the good Teacher; the great Reconciler (sorry, Chris!); anything but the one who paid a terrible price for our redemption. That image just does not fit in with their after-church sherry parties, I guess.
Submitted by Ed the Roman at 4/2/2004 12:11:14 PM

Baillie,

Handschy has far to go before he rises to TBLT. That is a truly wonderful story of faithfulness.

MC from CA,

"in the fullness of time bring all things into relationship with Christ."

I wonder if that lady realizes that Satan is in relationship with Christ: the relationship called enmity.

Submitted by Russ+ at 4/2/2004 7:03:31 PM

Allen Lewis, Thank you for exponding further upon my theme of not enough warm fuzzie relationships in this movie for these folks.

Reconcilition to them is a warm hug over an organic mocha latte after a little dispute over Dean or Kerry. I preached today that untangling the ugly, difficult, messy web of our relationships caused by sin is hard difficult stuff that we can only do by the Grace of God. Jesus reconciled us in our "relationship" to God by carrying a cross and adjures us pick up our cross and do no less. There was no cafe' al fresco at the top of Golgotha!
Submitted by gdb at 4/2/2004 9:49:34 PM

Interesting development in the Dio of Texas about "Passion" reviews. A few days ago I went to the site and found two negative reviews - actually the one review by the Rev. Cn. Mark Stanger of Grace Cathedral, San Francisco and the the NCC guide to the passion. So I sent the following to the diocesan director of communications:

"I think it sad, and a bit to be expected, that as Episcopalians we have such trouble with anything that smacks of evangelism. A film on the passion of the Christ comes out and the best we can do towards providing resource material is from the totally un-Christian NCC and from a literarily challenged, leftwing, barely Christian priest from California. The Southern Baptists, no traditional ally of Roman Catholicism, have the presence to see the potential of a great witness and outreach opportunity and took whole groups to theaters. Meanwhile we seem to be afraid that someone might actually take this Jesus "stuff" seriously and print NCC tripe. At least be willing to allow us as Episcopalians (we're supposed to be the "thinking" denomination, aren't we?) and provide some access to some reviews and resources that aren't afraid of the passion story."

I followed up with several links to positive reviews including those from The Very Rev. Dr. Paul Zahl, from Roger Ebert, and from the Bishop of the Diocese of Birmingham, England.

So I get a reply back that includes the following line: "Gary, I'm happy to link to whatever resources you can provide that are signed."

I went back to the diocesan website today (4/2) and find that all the references and links to "The Passion" have been removed.

Interesting
Submitted by Ken at 4/2/2004 10:05:07 PM

Christopher Hathaway -

Good point. It's almost like the devil in Screwtape Letters who gloats about the magician who practices forbidden magic while denying it's reality. The gnosticism of Griswold & Co. is deeply materialist yet denies the meaning of the material world in favor of spirituality (or something).
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