Is new religious movie too ‘Loosed’?
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I would commend almost any effort to sensitize people to the
suffering of prisoners, and especially women in prison. I have taught
classes and counseled prisoners for many years in places such as
Donovan Correctional Facility near San Diego, Cook County Jail in
Chicago, Dwight Correctional Center in Illinois and the Mississippi
State Penitentiary. It is not controversial to donate to the opera or
the Red Cross, but many people question whether those guilty of
crimes deserve programs or resources for rehabilitation. If this film
can mobilize people to engage in advocacy or reform of the penal
system, to emphasize programs for rehabilitation, to offer donations
and to consider alternatives to prison, then I hope it will be widely
viewed.
The differences between women and men in prison are significant.
Women are only 6% of the total prison population (Bureau of Justice
Statistics) and receive fewer services than men. But the number of
women involved in crime is rising: juvenile delinquency cases
involving females increased by 83% between 1988 and 1997, according
to the National Juvenile Court Data Base. Incest, physical and sexual
abuse, teen pregnancy, prostitution, drug abuse and serving as
accomplices to husbands and boyfriends are often contributing
factors. State prison reports indicate that 75% of women inmates had
used drugs regularly and half had histories of physical and sexual
abuse. A Canadian study found that 80% of women in prison were
survivors of sexual abuse or incest and 39% had attempted suicide.
Half of all women in prison are mothers of small children and most
are the sole caregiver. Girl Scouts Behind Bars is a program that
tries to keep mothers and daughters connected through a special
visitation program piloted by the National Institute for Justice.
For three years, our Zen Center offered a weekly meditation
program at Donovan Correctional Facility, as well as special programs
on anger management. I am confident that some of the men did benefit
from learning meditation. They could see its applications in anger
management and impulse control, as well as its usefulness in
self-reflection and life review. They could also use it as a path to
live as well as possible within prison conditions, whether short term
or for a lifetime.
The film “Doing Time, Doing Vipassana” provides a persuasive
example of the benefits of mindfulness meditation in prisons in
India. We were denied permission to offer programs at the women’s
prison due to overcrowding and security issues.
A realistic film that explores the relationship between those who
are first victims of crime and then become perpetrators or
accomplices to crime may help us to seek early interventions, provide
resources for treatment and find alternatives to prison.
REV. DEBORAH BARRETT
Zen Center of Orange County
Costa Mesa
First, I don’t care if it offends churchgoers. Neither would
Jesus. The pious religious people of Jesus’ day were offended that he
was hanging out with prostitutes and other shady elements in the
community. He rebuked them and told them that the he did not come to
coddle the “insiders,” but to reach out to the “outsiders.” People
who realize they need a doctor are those that a doctor is most
effective in helping. He said he came for the “sick,” not for the
healthy.
Second, isn’t it always Hollywood claiming that movies need to be
realistic to be effective? I found their critique of “The Passion of
the Christ” hypocritical. People need to understand that the
sanitized Jesus of most churches in no way reflects the real Savior
we worship.
Many people think they are too tainted for Jesus to care about.
Many faiths, like Islam, reject the crucified Christ because they see
it unfitting for a prophet or to suffer in that way. To them, Jesus
the good teacher is more acceptable than Jesus the suffering Messiah.
When Christianity cedes “the Passion” to what is politically correct,
we cede what is core to our faith. We live in a sick world. That
sickness has only one solution. It was a sick solution, but it is the
only solution.
I am not familiar with T.D. Jakes film, so I cannot speak directly
to its content. However, I can say that Jesus is not just a solution
for good people. You don’t have to “clean up” to come to Jesus. In
the midst of our pain and tragedy, no matter how violent or tragic,
he wants us to know he stands with us and suffered for us. The brutal
crucifixion is proof that he cares about us, that “he would rather
die than live without us.” But he does not just offer us sympathy; he
offers us victory. When he rose from the dead, conquering death, he
did so on our behalf so that we might do the same. That is our hope.
That is what gives us strength in the tragic. He tells us he is ready
to change us from victims to victors, if only we will give him the
chance.
SENIOR ASSOCIATE PASTOR
RIC OLSEN
Harbor Trinity
Costa Mesa
The marketing of “The Passion of the Christ” was innovative, but
not unique; Martin Scorsese’s 1987 film, “The Last Temptation of
Christ” is one precedent. Mel Gibson’s film was promoted in this
Parish Church only in ways suggested by our leaders, and I doubt that
more of our people saw it than would have if it had never been
mentioned here.
The event that the movie was in American society last February had
two significant, lasting effects: Most, if not all, members of this
Christian community would agree with one of our faithful parishioners
who said, “I understand myself well enough to know that I would have
been in the mob yelling for crucifixion had I been present at the
actual event. There is something in me that can’t stand absolute love
and goodness, even though I crave it. So the “cross test” is one I
fail completely. I also understand that God’s answer to my failure is
love and forgiveness and presence in my life forever and that,
therefore, I have no need for fear.”
Secondly, we at St. Michael & All Angelites understand anew the
suffering Jesus endured to restore and reconcile us with God. These
two things make “The Passion” event worthwhile.
Bishop Thomas D. Jakes, Sr., often referred to as a “Shepherd to
the Shattered,” has a most effective ministry. “Woman, Thou Art
Loosed!” is a play created and produced by his theater production
company, Touchdown Concepts; this is the first I’ve heard of it being
made into a movie.
Holy Scripture clearly contains “sexual abuse, drug use and
violence.” Examples include the forcible seduction of Tamar by Amnon
in II Samuel 13:2-14 and the woman caught in adultery of John 8:3-11;
drunkenness is associated with licentiousness in Hosea 4:11,18 and
with debauchery in I Peter 4:3; and violence is everywhere!
As in history, in our contemporary society these and other
examples of “why Jesus was crucified” are everywhere! I wonder why
more emphasis on them is needed. Our freedoms as Americans mean that
Bishop Jakes may promote his movie whenever he wishes and wherever he
is welcome. However I doubt that he will be coming to Corona del
Mar/Newport Beach/Costa Mesa; and unless leaders here advocate to the
contrary, his film will not be promoted in this Episcopal Parish
Church.
THE VERY REV’D CANON
PETER D. HAYNES
St. Michael & All Angels
Episcopal Church
Corona del Mar
While I know it is a sign of age, I believe things were not only
different when I was growing up, but better. There was a time when
more was left to the imagination than was revealed. Subtlety,
moderation, and modesty were hallmarks of society. Today, in our
over-the-top, tell-all, in-your-face culture, nothing shocks us
anymore. We are so inundated with images of brutality, in a society
so saturated with violence, that our emotions are numbed to
bloodshed, cruelty, and outrageous behavior. There is no longer a
category of “going too far.”
Graphic depictions of brutality, sadism and gore elicit yawns. We
are so jaded, that even films featuring religious messages struggle
to outdo the worst excesses of Hollywood to grab attention.
Who blushes anymore? There is no sense of shame. Depictions of the
despicable and the bizarre are daily fare. What was implicit is now
explicit. Must I see depravity portrayed in lingering close-ups to
understand the message of a film? Do I need to watch stomach-churning
portrayals of barbarism to appreciate the moral of the story? I
submit that the most powerful messages are conveyed through artistic
implication, apprehended out of the corner of the eye, intimated to
the viewer. I accept that I am hopelessly outdated, but I yearn for
the culture that respected boundaries, one that preferred the hint of
suggestion to the highly suggestive.
Shelley Winters once said, “I think on-stage nudity is disgusting,
shameful and damaging to all things American. But if I were 22 with a
great body, it would be artistic, tasteful, patriotic and a
progressive religious experience.”
Any artist can rationalize what he chooses to portray and there
will always be disagreement as to what is vital to a presentation and
what is gratuitous. But there are still some of us not yet
de-sensitized to violence and still capable of being revolted. While
the goal of a film may be noble, the end does not always justify the
means.
RABBI MARK S. MILLER
Temple Bat Yam
Newport Beach
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