14 May 2010

Violence, Drama, and the Passion

I'm struck by the Gospel accounts of the Passion of the Christ.  They are very matter of fact: "Pilate had him flogged";  "they spit upon him and mocked him"; "they crucified him".  There is no screaming, no cries of agony and pain, no descriptions of how badly Jesus bled, no gore.  Except for one account while Jesus was on the way to Golgatha, there is no weeping and wailing.

I'm not saying these things didn't happen.  I'm saying they aren't recorded in the Gospels.  There is simply no drama.  Read them for yourself.  It just isn't there.

WE are the ones who add the images of profuse bleeding, the flailing flesh, the screaming, the gore, the violence, and the drama of the whole thing. We film it, produce it, act it out on stage, AND... we'll pay money to watch it. 

I wonder what that says about us??

Biblically, the real drama begins at the Resurrection: fear and trembling, running, weeping, unalloyed joy, confusion, wonder, shouting...

And yet good, churchgoing folks still want to watch Jesus put on trial, flogged, spit upon, nailed to the cross... killed and buried... over and over again, especially on Good Friday.

I'm afraid that we are too accustomed to looking AT the Passion when we should be looking THROUGH the Passion to the joy that awaits on the other side of it.  That's where the real action begins!  Shouldn't we be more excited about life than about violent death??

1 comment:

Mary Ann said...

I so agree with what you say about us being too caught up in the drama of Christ's death that we overlook the BETTER PART - the joy that salvation brings...and living as renewed, SAVED people.

My husband kept asking me to watch Gibson's "The Passion", but when I finally consented to it all I could think was "no, no, no....this is not the primary focus of what Jesus wants for us... and certainly should not be the primary means of drawing in new Christians, either!".

Yes, we must acknowledge His supreme sacrifice for our sins and be extremely reverent for this sacrifice. Yes, it had to be brutal and horrific way to die for the One Without Sin -- But you are right. We miss so much when we focus too much on just His Divine agony and especially in such a way as we do.

We miss the BETTER part of what the Resurrection brings us.

THANK YOU for your insightful commentary.