| Reflecting
on The Passion of the Christ
By
Dan Hayden
|
Mel
Gibson's film The Passion of the Christ (2004)
has elicited responses that span the spectrum of human emotion
and experience. In doing so it has set numerous box office
records, caused controversy regarding alleged anti-Semitism,
and encouraged multitudes who are humbled by the sacrifice
made by our Savior.
The
following reflections and observations were made by Dr.
Dan Hayden during morning devotions at Sola Scriptura.
|
The Mel
Gibson film The Passion of the Christ is on everyone's
mind, and talking about it seems to be on everyone's lips. The film
has had record attendance and been a financial success the first
week and weekend of its release, and it seems that all of the media,
be it news or talk show hosts, are speaking about it continually.
Mel Gibson has been interviewed by Diane Sawyer and Jay Leno, and
it just seems that everyone is taken with this movie and with the
subject of the passion of Christ. Magazine covers featuring Gibson
or actor James Caviezel, who portrays Jesus, are just about everywhere.
Of course, there has been controversy about the film, controversy
that centers around anti-Semitism predominantly, but that has not
been much of an issue in the end. Many Rabbis are saying that the
anti-Semitic tone is really not a prominent element and that it
is nothing to be concerned about. Initially, that gave it notoriety;
conflict always does that. But now it has become something of a
major discussion, and Christ always divides. There are those that
are not interested in knowing about the death of Christ and yet
they are curious to see the film. So the anti-Christian sentiment
that has been in America is being challenged these days because
of Mel Gibson's boldness through the film.
Mel Gibson,
of course, is a Catholic and is coming at the film from a very Catholic
perspective. There are a number of very strong Catholic elements
in the film. I think primarily the emphasis on Mary is striking
with regard to Catholic theology. She seems to be everywhere. She
is mopping up blood after the scourging. Of course, the Bible doesn't
say that. She is really in almost every scene, in the background
or in a prominent place. She asks her Son if she can die with Him
as she's looking at Him on the cross. There is that identity of
Mary with the death of Christ as well; not just in mourning His
death but in wanting to participate in it. These are strong Catholic
elements that you do not find in the Bible, and so there has been
some criticism of the film on the part of the Protestant community
regarding the dramatic liberties that are taken with the account.
Yet I would agree, as I have seen the film, that the quote from
the Pope is generally correct, "It is as it was." Mel
Gibson has done quite a credible job, apart from those additions,
of giving The Passion of the Christ a realistic (though
unusually emphatic view with regard to the suffering) view of the
scriptural account of the death of Christ.
It really
appears as though God is using this film. Churches all over the
country have been urging people to see it, and they have established
follow-up programs to lead people to Christ. I have been in many
church settings where the question is asked of the audience "how
many have seen the film" and many hands go up, and "how
many have not seen it but are intending to" and many more hands
go up. It is a question that is being asked everywhere, and it seems
that everyone has an interest or intent to see the film. There are
some that won't because of the grisly nature of the suffering and
the scourging and crucifixion, but by and large Christians and non-Christians
alike are being drawn to The Passion of the Christ.
Now, there
are a number of things I would like to say about The Passion
of the Christ from a biblical point of view as it relates to
this film. One is an amplification with regard to the suffering
of Christ, and the second has to do with the accuracy of Mel Gibson's
portrayal of the story really beginning with the Gethsemane experience
and the prayer of our Lord in the garden.
First of
all, with regard to the crucifixion itself. Crucifixion did not
begin with the Romans. Herodotus, the Greek historian, tells us
that the Persians practiced crucifixion as an extreme form of punishment,
and it was used for those that had committed sedition against the
government of Persia and other heinous crimes, and it was an extreme
form of capital punishment. Other sources tell us that the Assyrians
used crucifixion; they were very brutal people, and they would impale
as well as crucify. Even European groups of the ancient world –
the Celts, the Germans, and even the Britons – used crucifixion
as a means of public punishment for the crime of rebellion against
the government, seditious intent and so forth. Alexander the Great
of the Greek Empire, who ruled after the Persians, also used crucifixion.
When he conquered the city of Tyre, the Phoenician city on the Mediterranean,
he had 2000 of its citizens crucified along the coastline as a message
to all of the other cities, states, and governments in the Middle
East that resistance to his rule was futile. It was for the purpose
of creating a sense of horror and fear that you did not want to
rebel against his authority. So crucifixion was around for a long
time.
The fact
that Christ was crucified was not unusual in terms of history. It
was a very extreme form of suffering, and Mel Gibson has placed
a magnifying glass on the sufferings of Christ. You read the biblical
account and it's not nearly as explicit as The Passion of the
Christ with regard to all of the gore and pain and the mutilation
of the body. You just don't find that in the Scriptures. The Scriptures
are more inclined to give us simply the fact of the matter that
Christ died for our sins. In the movie, Mel Gibson, according to
his own testimony, wanted people to understand the severity of the
suffering, so he sort of magnified it. He put a magnifying glass
on it. For instance, in the scourging experience, scourging was
generally limited to a certain amount of strokes of the whip by
the Roman government. Yet in the film it goes on and on. You think
it's done and then it starts all over again. There just seems to
be no end to it. They even continue to scourge Christ along the
Via Dolorosa as He is carrying the cross and moving toward the place
of the crucifixion. He is continually scourged which may not have
been the case. That would have been unusual. The Roman government
had no qualms with Christ. Pilate said so. The soldiers thought
it was a big joke, and they mocked him and put the crown of thorns
upon His head. They dressed Him in a purple robe and mocked Him,
but there is no indication that they had any vindictive spirit toward
Him that would lead to beating Him along the way. Of course, the
Jews had no opportunity to do that, so there was some license taken
on the part of the movie to accentuate the suffering in ways the
Bible does not speak about. Even with the crucifixion, after they
had nailed Christ to the cross, Gibson shows the Romans turn it
over with a big thud in order to bend the nails in to hold them
in place. The cross is then flipped back over. That is not spoken
of in the Scriptures, and yet that was another part of the magnification
in an effort to add to the sense of the suffering.
As much
as Mel Gibson amplified the sufferings, I think there is an aspect
of Scripture that amplifies it still further. Not with the description
of the gore and the suffering, but an understanding of exactly what
crucifixion is and then the spiritual dimension of the sufferings
of Christ which go far beyond anything that any other person had
ever experienced. In Isaiah Chapter 52, which acts as an introduction
to Isaiah 53's account of the suffering Messiah, it says that His
visage was marred more than any man (52:14). Well, there had been
thousands, maybe hundreds of thousands, of crucifixion victims.
As we've seen, the Persians, Assyrians, Europeans, and Greeks were
crucifying people before Rome had throughout its empire. We know
that there were two thieves crucified with Christ. It was a common
thing. A lot of other men had gone through the very thing that Christ
had gone through, and yet the Scripture says that His visage was
more marred than any other person. So there had to have been something
more, something additional that Christ experienced.
Let me talk
for a minute about an additional aspect of the actual crucifixion
experience. We need to go back to the Old Testament to set the stage
for this.
In Joshua
8:29, there is an account of Joshua conquering the city of Ai. Now
he had already conquered Jericho and the next step as he moved inland
was to take the city of Ai which was fortified. After he had conquered
that city, it says in verses 28-29, "And Joshua burned Ai and
made it a heap forever, a desolation until this day, and he hanged
the King of Ai on a tree until evening. And at sunset Joshua gave
command and they took his body down from the tree and threw it at
the entrance of the city gate and raised over it a great heap of
stones that stand to this day." So here is a practice that
Joshua engaged in of taking the King, the ruler, that had resisted
the authority of Joshua, and he hung him on a tree. Now, this was
a humane way of doing it as the man was already dead. The Romans
put live victims on their trees, their crosses, but the Jews did
practice hanging a person on a tree until sundown.
It happened
again in Joshua 10:26-27 where we read that there were five kings
of a southern coalition that had resisted Joshua. After he had defeated
them, they hid in a cave. Joshua knew their location, so he rounded
them up, and it says in verses 26-27, "So afterward Joshua
struck them and put them to death and he hanged them on five trees
and they hung on the trees until evening. And it came about at sunset
that Joshua commanded and they took them down from the trees and
threw them into the cave where they had hidden themselves and put
large stones over the mouth of the cave to this very day."
So here again, he hung them on trees.
Now there
was a very good reason for doing this. Not only did Joshua want
to kill these resisters of his authority, and in a sense the authority
of God, but he also wanted to put them to public shame and humiliation.
So he actually hung the bodies on trees all day long. They couldn't
be there after sundown, but they hung there as a demonstration of
the curse of God upon these people. Now, this goes back to an item
in the law of God in the book of Deuteronomy. In Deuteronomy 21:22-23,
it says, "And if a man has committed a sin worthy of death
and he is put to death and you hang him on a tree, his corpse shall
not hang all night on the tree but you shall surely bury him on
the same day for he who is hanged is accursed of God so that you
do not defile your land which the Lord your God gives you as an
inheritance." Now they could hang a person on a tree, and it
says that if they did that as a special indication as a curse of
God upon that person, they were not to leave them up after sundown
because that would bring a curse upon the land. They were to take
them down, but they could, for a time, put them into that position
of shame and humiliation. Not only was it a position of shame and
humiliation where people could come by, but they could also revile
the bodies, they could hit them, they could in some other way do
violence against them, they could yell at them and vent their emotions.
It was a symbol also that this person was especially cursed of God.
This person had rebelled against the authority of God, and therefore,
it was a position of curse.
Now, whether
the Persians, Assyrians, Greeks and Romans got the idea from the
Jews of hanging a person on a tree we don't know, but the idea of
crucifixion included that. It was not only killing a person, putting
him to death, capital punishment. We have many ways of doing that:
the electric chair, lethal injection, hanging, and several others.
The Jews also would stone a person death. These are all ways of
putting a person to death, but this was an added idea of bringing
the sense of humiliation and shame to the person. So the Jews practiced
that with the corpse. The others practiced it with the living victim.
There was not only the idea of death. There was the idea of shame.
Now, the
writer to the Hebrews in Hebrews Chapter 12, brings this out, and
he says in Hebrews 12:2, "fixing our eyes on Jesus, the author
and finisher of our faith," and then it talks about His death,
"who for the joy that was set before Him." The joy is
obviously associated with the last thing that is said, "who
is set down at the right hand of the throne of God," and that
was the ultimate expectation and that was the joy or the end result.
But it says two other things in verse 2, "who for the joy that
was set before Him endured the cross," that's the physical
pain of the cross experience. Then it says, "despising the
shame." You see, there is a second element and that is the
shame. So it wasn't just a matter of being killed for your crime,
it was also a matter of putting you to public humiliation, of putting
you into a place of shame so that there would be this response of
the crowd of people that went by, and of course, the Romans always
crucified their victims along busy thoroughfares for the express
purpose of creating the fear in those who saw it of doing any such
thing themselves. So that was the idea of crucifixion. It wasn't
just physical pain. It was also humiliation.
In The
Passion of the Christ, physical pain comes out very strongly.
That was the emphasis. There was the physical torture and the physical
pain, but there was also the humiliation. Crucified victims were
put on crosses naked and there they hung naked in front of all of
the people in a condition of shame as they died a prolonged death
for hours, sometimes days. People would die on the cross more from
suffocation than they would from bleeding to death, so it was a
long, enduring process and you were hung there in a condition of
shame. And so it says of Christ that He not only endured the cross,
He despised the shame. So there were those two elements.
Another
thing
that we need to understand is that when Christ died on the cross,
He died in our place. It was a substitutionary sacrifice. Of course,
there are statements in the film that try to help us understand
that it was for our sin and so forth, but that was not emphasized.
Even though certain lines were subtitled in the film, you couldn't
understand those that weren't because it was all in Aramaic. But
in the script there were certain things and statements that showed
that Mel Gibson understood that Christ was dying for our sins. I
don't think that the majority of unbelieving people will come out
of the film knowing that it was because of their sin that Christ
died, which is why follow-up is so important with regard to the
film. Paul says in Galatians 3:13, which is his explanation of the
death of Christ for us, "For as many as are under the works
of the law are under a curse for it is written, cursed is everyone
who does not abide in all things written in the book of the law
to perform them" (verse 10). Now down to verse 13, "Christ
redeemed us from the curse of the law having become a curse for
us for it is written, cursed is everyone who hangs on a tree."
That is a quote from that Deuteronomy passage, chapter 21:22-23.
That is what is written, that cursed is everyone who hangs on a
tree. Now, you see that is what was due to us and when Christ died
on the cross, He redeemed us. That means He took our place and made
it possible for us to go free because He took the punishment in
our place. But it wasn't just the pain. That's the emphasis of the
film and something I want to go beyond and expand your understanding.
It wasn't just the pain. It was the shame that was another aspect,
and Christ took our shame. You and I deserve to be punished for
our sins, and the Bible says that those who do not know Christ as
their Savior will be punished forever for their sins and there will
be physical pain associated with that; the fires of hell, the lake
of fire and so forth. But there is another aspect which is the utter
shame that comes from rebellion against the authority of God. Every
time I exercise my independent will of God, I say "I will,
I'll do this, I'll do that," independent of His will, I am
guilty of sedition against the government of God. I am guilty of
rebellion against the authority of God, and so I deserve to be put
to public shame. So as you watch the crucifixion and you see the
pain and suffering, that's just one aspect. The public shame is
another. So I need to be doubly grateful that Christ not only took
my suffering in terms of physical pain, but he also took my shame
upon Himself. That adds another dimension.
That's why
the Jews were not satisfied when Pilate said he did not find in
any fault in this man and that He was not guilty of sedition against
the government of Rome. So the Jews said they had a law and by this
law the man should die because He claimed to be God. You see, the
ultimate sin against the government of God is to claim to be God.
That's why they wanted Him killed, but they didn't want Him just
killed. Pilate said to take Him and do to Him according to your
law. Now, with their law they could put Him to death by stoning
Him. They did this to Stephen in Acts 7, so they did have the privilege
under Roman government to enact their capital punishment which was
stoning. But they wanted more than stoning, and they understood
the principle of cross-execution; that it wasn't just putting to
death but also putting to public humiliation. They didn't want Him
crucified just because of the extreme torture and the pain of that.
They wanted Him crucified because it would fulfill the intention
of Deuteronomy 21. He would be hung on a tree just like the king
of Ai and the five kings of the southern coalition were in Joshua's
day. That would be the appropriate response to what, in their minds,
Jesus had done. You see, that's why they clamored for the crucifixion
of Jesus.
Let me say
one other thing with regard to the reason for the death of Christ.
This will demonstrate the insight of Mel Gibson to start the movie
in the Garden of Gethsemane. He didn't start it with the trials
and the crucifixion itself. He started it in the Garden of Gethsemane.
Now, if you go back into the gospel record, one of things you discover
is that they were wanting to kill Christ much sooner than they actually
did. In fact, over and over you discover that the religious leaders
were so intense in their hatred of Christ that they made many attempts
to kill Him, to stone Him, on those occasions. In Luke 4, Luke tells
us that when Jesus first preached in his hometown, the City of Nazareth,
and He said that the prophecy of Isaiah was being fulfilled in what
He was doing, they got so mad at Him that they wanted to lay hands
on Jesus, to drag Him out of the city and throw Him off the cliff
that was just outside of the City. It goes on to say that they couldn't
do it. They had intention to do it, but Jesus simply walked through
their midst and walked away. On other occasions, in the Gospel of
John, he mentions over and over their attempts to actually kill
Christ. At the end of John 8 when Jesus said, "Before Abraham
was, I am," and claimed to be the Jehovah God of Exodus 3,
they got so mad they actually picked up stones to stone Him, but
again He walked away. At the end of John Chapter 10 of the good
shepherd story, again they are so mad that they wanted to seize
Him and made every attempt to go out and grab Him, but they couldn't
do it. You see, there was a prohibition by God with regard to the
dirty, soiled hands of the religious elite to lay hands on Jesus.
They couldn't do it. They couldn't put their dirty hands on Jesus,
because He was the holy Son of God. He was the perfect one, the
one without sin according to Scripture. So they were never allowed
to touch Christ. Now the only occasion in which they would be allowed
to touch Christ is when He became a substitute for the actual guilty
parties. At that point, He is treated as though He is guilty because
He is in the place of another who is guilty.
Now, when
did God the Father allow people, the authorities, to actually lay
hands of Jesus? Never in all of His public ministry were they allowed
to do that until the Garden of Gethsemane. You see, when Jesus was
in the garden, He prayed intense prayers. What was happening in
the Garden of Gethsemane? Well, the question is often asked when
the sins of the world were placed upon Jesus, and very often the
idea is when He was on the cross or perhaps at the moment He prayed,
"My God my God, why hast thou forsaken me," and at that
point the sins of the world were placed upon Jesus. Well, I would
suggest to you that the sins of the world, your sin and my sin,
were placed on Jesus in the Garden of Gethsemane, because that is
when the authorities were able to seize Him and actually treat Him
as an evil person. You see, "The Passion" didn't begin
when he was scourged or when He was hung on the cross. "The
Passion" began when they were able to rough Him up, as it were,
which they began to do right away. They grabbed Him and, in an ancient
sense, handcuffed Him. They herded Him off to the trial, first with
Annas and then with Caiaphas and then with the Sanhedrin. Of course,
there was only one trial in the movie before Caiaphas, but there
are actually three in the Scriptures, one before Annas, who was
Caiaphas' father-in-law and the official high priest, though not
the ruling high priest, and then before Caiaphas in the night, a
very illegal trial, and then a quickly called meeting of the Sanhedrin
to legitimize or attempt to legitimize what they had done in the
morning. So there were actually three trials. Christ was taken and
treated badly. They not only verbally abused Him. On one occasion,
one of the officers of the guard actually struck Him in the face
because of what he felt to be a dishonorable comment with regard
to the high priest, and Jesus asked, "What wrong have I done?"
Yet Jesus was accepting this. Why? Because He was already our substitute
at that point. You see, in the garden when He was praying in the
movie there was an indication that He was praying to the Father
not to let bad people do bad things to Him as though He were somewhat
intimidated by the mistreatment that was coming by the physical
suffering He was anticipating. But I don't believe that was the
case. Martyrs for the faith have died rejoicing in their martyrdom.
Foxe tells us in his Book of Martyrs that Christians have
gone to the stake burning to death while singing hymns. People have
been courageous in going to their death, even excruciating death,
even tortured death, because of their love for Christ. Men and women
have endured awful things. I think of Mel Gibson himself in the
portrayal of Braveheart and the incredible tortures that
were inflicted on the people and then his standing for what he felt
to be the truth in that great war where they just ran into the war
with great courage.
You see,
Christ is no less than His believers who die a martyr's death with
joy. I don't think Christ was afraid of the physical aspect. He
didn't enjoy it, but I don't think He was afraid of it. There was
something far worse. You see in Isaiah that His visage was marred
more than any man. Something happened to Jesus that had not happened
to the hundreds of thousands of crucified victims over the centuries.
There in the Garden of Gethsemane as sin was placed upon Jesus,
the pressure was so great that it drove the blood through His pores.
There is some debate as to whether He actually bled in the garden.
The text seems to indicate that He did or perhaps it was sweat drops
coming off of Him as though He were bleeding. It seems that He actually
bled and that His garments were blood-soaked before He was ever
taken to the trial and crucifixion. That is where the suffering
began, and the suffering was not a physical torture. The suffering
was the spiritual pain, the emotional pain, and the spiritual intensity
of the sins of the world being placed upon Him. Now, I think of
my sins and I think of all that being placed on Jesus, and I see
that would be awesome for someone else to take all that I've done
and take the punishment that is due for that. Then you start thinking
of the people around you, your close associates, and add that to
the mix and you get a little more overwhelmed. Then you start adding
the sins of the people in the greater context of your community
and your town and then your state and then the entire United States.
Then you add the whole North American continent and then all of
the continents of the world, and you've just done one generation.
Then you take all of the sins of all of the generations in world
history and place all of that on Jesus, and the effect would have
been intense and incredible. At that point, Jesus is standing in
the point of every condemned sinner and that's why they were allowed
to mistreat him, because that's what we deserve. Everything He went
through was maltreatment. It was injustice because we all know that
Jesus wasn't guilty of any of that, but when you realize He was
in our place, everything He accepted was justice. It was right.
It's what we would have deserved if it had been us. Now, the sins
of the world are upon Him at that point in the Garden of Gethsemane.
So there is not only the physical suffering and the public humiliation,
there is the spiritual suffering of the sins of the world being
upon Him.
So now Jesus
goes to the trials and they lead Him to Pilate and He goes through
the trial of Pilate and then over to Herod and then back to Pilate.
The movie had that correct. The visit to Herod was the part that
Luke gives us (23:8-12). He's the only Gospel writer that tells
us that. There wasn't just one trial with Pilate; there were two.
Finally Pilate gets Jesus back and has to dispose of the situation.
So He gives in because it's a holiday season and he doesn't want
to create a stir and have the Jews rebel against him. That would
have been bad news in the Roman Empire and Caesar would have been
angry with Pilate. So Pilate gives in for political reasons and
commits Jesus to crucifixion. Before crucifixion there is the scourging,
and Pilate had hoped that just the scourging would appease them.
So he has Jesus whipped. History tells us that it was so brutal
that men would often die from the scourging and never make it to
the cross. The lashes would often lacerate the flesh and even the
bowels would begin to hang out. That's gruesome to talk about, but
that's how brutal the scourging was. So that's what is emphasized
in the movie.
Then Jesus
went to the cross. But in the film you don't ever get a sense of
the greater suffering that would have been coming upon Christ, and
that's the spiritual suffering. In Psalm 22, we are given an insight
into the crucifixion experience. The Psalm begins, "My God
my God, why have you forsaken me." Obviously, those are the
very words that Jesus spoke on the cross, so that Psalm must have
been on His mind. If you read the Psalm, it is a prayer, a communion
if you will, not a pleasant communion, but one of great awesomeness
on the part of the Messiah who was going to be crucified. "They
pierced my hands and my feet," it says in the Psalm later on
in verse 16. So here is this prayer and the whole prayer is the
awesome experience of being separated from the Father. Of course,
that's how the Psalm begins, "My God my God, why have you forsaken
me?" It goes on expression after expression saying "I'm
alone, where are you, why won't you help me?" There is this
incredible sense of distance of the Son from the Father, and that
appears to be the greater suffering. It was the suffering that He
expressed when He was on the cross. He said the very thing Psalm
22 says. The first words out of His mouth on the cross after being
there for a period of time. At that point, when all of that came
to a head and He was actually receiving the ultimate punishment
for sin, God pulled the shade down. It says it went dark for three
hours. You couldn't see. I think it was during that period of time
that his visage was so marred more than any man. The contortions
of his face with the extreme pressure; not of the physical suffering,
not even of the humiliation, but of the spiritual pressure upon
Him as He took sin upon His holy frame. You know, God is holy. He
can't stand sin, and that is why He is going to punish sin. That's
why there is eternal damnation for those that don't come to Christ
and are not forgiven of their sins. God can't stand sin. I don't
think we have any idea or any reference to understand even the beginnings
of that concept of Christ having the sins placed upon Himself in
those dark hours. His face went into contortions, His body already
wracked with pain, and His mind and emotions with humiliation. The
spiritual sense of alienation from the Father is the sense of Psalm
22. Extreme alienation from the Father was the greater suffering.
You see,
when Mel Gibson decided to put a magnifying glass on the suffering
of Christ, he only went part way. You get the sense of the physical
suffering. You get a little bit of the sense of the humiliation,
although even that is minimized, but you really don't get a sense
of the greater suffering which is the spiritual suffering from the
alienation from the Father. Though the film has some inaccuracies
and a deliberate Catholic emphasis that is not so appreciated by
those us of who are Protestants, I believe that Mel Gibson has really
done a good job in presenting the film the way he has. Christ did
suffer, and there is that window into His suffering, that magnifying
glass on His suffering. But we who understand the Scriptures need
to take it even further. That magnifying glass needs to magnify
it even further to the extreme humiliation that Christ is experiencing,
but then the substitutionary nature of the sacrifice where He is
taking our alienation from the Father and that spiritual alienation
is the most incredible of all. So when you think about it, people
who do not know Christ as their Savior and go into an eternal loss
will not only have physical pain which is the fires of Hell according
to Scripture, but they will have humiliation in the government of
God from the angelic world and all of creation. There is a humiliation
that will be incredible, but the greater pain of eternal loss will
be alienation from God. I'm convinced of that. It was the greater
agony of Jesus on the cross.
Is the film
good? Well, I think it is in the sense that it is raising a public
awareness of Jesus that is absolutely wonderful in our day. It is
causing people to have to think about Jesus and that is good. I
think Mel Gibson is exactly right that it began in the Garden of
Gethsemane, not with a prayer to be delivered in the physical suffering
and from the bad things they were going to do to Him, but the greater
suffering of alienation from the Father. That's where it all began.
That's where the sins of the world were placed on Jesus, and everything
else was not a miscarriage of justice. It was a miscarriage of justice
as far as Jesus was concerned in His actual person as the holy Son
of God, but it was actual justice that was due to you and me and
Jesus was taking our place. If you can view that as you see the
film or reflect upon it, you begin to get an overwhelming sense
of what Jesus did for you. That should create real sense of humility
and repentance and of being drawn to Christ with great appreciation.
I think
the film is a good thing due to the fact that it is being followed-up
by those who truly love Christ. As I've heard the various interviews
with Mel Gibson and some of the stories that have come out in the
magazines, I have to believe that Mel Gibson knows Christ as his
Savior. He talks about his own sin. In fact, there is one point
in the film where he appears. When the nail is driven through the
hand of Jesus, that hand holding the nail is Mel Gibson's hand.
That is a gesture on his part to say it was "my" sin that
put that nail through his hand. I think he understands that, so
I applaud Gibson for his courage, and I applaud him for understanding
what the death of Christ was really about. It was the atonement
for our sin, and even though there are some inaccuracies and a Catholicism
aspect to it, I truly believe God is going to use the film. But
we need to understand that the magnifying glass needs to be more
intense. It needs to go beyond the suffering of Christ to the humiliation
of Christ and into the alienation of Christ from the Father. That
was the greater suffering. Understanding that, you truly understand
The Passion of the Christ.
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