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Jesus
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SOUL
MATES
The
Movie
|
The
screenplay is currently being written by a writer/director who is
passionate about the book. Financing for the project is also in
the works. Stay tuned. The Alternative to The Passion
is coming!
Option
to Produce Film
Several
movie producers and directors have contacted me suggesting that
Jesus of India would make a terrific movie. One of those
was very excited about the prospect of developing the screenplay
and creating the film.
After
exchanging emails it was clear that this director had excitement
and passion for the project. When we spoke on the phone it was
like we were old friends. My wife commented that she thought I was
talking to someone I'd known for a long time. Such IS
synchronicity. Obviously, for a writer, there could hardly be
better news than finding a director who wants to turn your novel
into a movie.
As
for myself, I always had faith that the book would become a movie.
It would happen of its own accord when the time was right. I also
knew that when that time came, the sales of my book would pick up
-- that the energy surrounding the movie production would increase
the sales. I expected a convergence of energies contributing to,
and receiving from, a growing spiritual consciousness in the
world. I expect that offers to help with the project will come
from many unexpected sources.
I
have been patient. I knew that my book was ahead of its time. But
my reading of the current gurus and sages continued to indicate a
rising in the world's consciousness level. At some point, I knew
the level of consciousness in the world would be vibrating at a
level that would begin to make my book appealing. Then the
energies unleashed would contribute to sales of my book, and the
book would give energy back to that consciousness. It is happening
now.
Jesus
of India was written before Mel Gibson's "The Passion"
was made. Gibson had to make the film with his own money because
Hollywood financiers didn't believe a Jesus film would make money.
It has turned out to be one of the biggest money producers.
From
the reviews I was not inclined to see the film. However, since it
was about Jesus, I had to see it. On the way to the theater, I
told my wife "I don't think we should pay to see this."
It was an off-handed comment. When we arrived at the theater a
large burly man in his mid thirties began to approach us. I
thought he's a bouncer, telling us that the movie is sold out. Or
maybe he's going to give us a tract. Instead, he asked if we were
going "to see The Passion." We said, "Yes."
"Would
you like some free tickets? My church group bought tickets for our
youth group and we have two extras. They're yours."
We
couldn't believe our ears. I had just said we shouldn't pay to see
this move. My thinking was that we would be supporting it. I did
not want to support a film that I felt was toking the standard
line -- the typical conservative view that was regular fair in the
conservative Christan churches. Now I didn't have to contribute
support. Synchronicity at work!
The
film was as I suspected -- nothing new theologically -- nothing
enlightening. When it was over, most of the audience was still in
their seats, quiet. We got up and left. It was obvious that many
others were deeply affected. A young girl next to us had been in
tears much of the time. I thought it strange, yet telling, that me
and my wife were not so affected. I realized then how far I was
from mainstream spiritual understanding.
Jesus
of India will be an alternative to "The Passion."
It will be uplifting, consciousness raising, enlightening,
challenging, and well done. This will be the case if I am
consulted on the film or not. It is out of my hands. It is in the
hands of Source. Source knows how to do movies, just as well as It
knows how to make universes.
I am
well aware that most books do not get made into movies. Many
screenplays never get made into movies. Many great screenplays
hardly get shopped because the screenwriter can't even get in the
front door of a studio for consideration. I am therefore humbled
and greatly appreciative that someone in the industry came to me
wanting to make the movie. How lucky can I get. Very lucky, I
believe.
I wish to thank the director for his willingness
to pursue making a movie from my book. I thank God that He has the
same passion that I had in writing the book.
May Source
bless this project.
At
this time a screenplay is in the works. It should be done sometime
in 2005 or early 2006.
ALTERNATIVE
VIEW OF GIBSON'S "PASSION"
By
Mathew Fox, Ph.D., theologian, writer, teacher.
Many years
ago, after finishing doctoral studies in Paris, I spent a semester
at the University of Munster in Germany. While there I lived in a
Dominican convent which housed about six other Dominicans, one of
whom was old and very strange and never appeared during the day
time at meals or for any other reason. He seemed only to go out at
night.
One
day I was asked to go in his room to fetch a book and I was amazed
to see the books on his bookshelf (including Mein Kampf). I was
especially amazed by a "holy card" on his prie dieu (a
place where one kneels to pray). This "holy card" was
the most gory I had ever seen, with Jesus depicted as thoroughly
bloodied, beaten, abused and victimized. I later learned that this
Dominican priest with the gory "holy card" was a
self-appointed chaplain to the Nazi's of Munster. The year was
1970.
As I sat and watched Mel Gibson's The Passion of
the Christ, with its unrelenting emphasis on blood and gore I
had a déjà vu experience as I vividly recalled this
Dominican priest and his particular form of piety.
Gibson
set out his intentions for his film in an interview: "I want
to push you over the edge, push you right over the edge, so you
can stay there and hang out with and get to a higher plane through
the pain." Piety as pain, pain as piety. This movie opens a
door on fascist piety which is pain-driven.
The piety of
fascism is inevitably a piety of pain and suffering (thus the
complete fascination with redemption and total refusal to
entertain grace and original blessing) and it manifests itself in
full bloody form in this movie. Gibson is allegedly a member of
Opus Dei, a secretive Catholic sect of wealthy men whose
spirituality is deeply fascistic. Its founder, a Spanish priest
named Escriva, whom the Pope rushed into canonization two years
ago in record time, was a card carrying fascist who actually
praised Adolph Hitler and who was also deeply sexist. Two of his
Opus Dei members served on Franco's cabinet.
The present
pope has taken this religious order under his wing (his own press
secretary is a member of Opus Dei) and has appointed many Opus Dei
bishops and cardinals (especially in Latin America after
decimating the liberation theology and base communities there).
They have constructed an $81 million edifice in Manhattan and are
ensconced in the financial capitals of Europe, especially in
Frankfurt, which is replacing Switzerland as the financial capital
of Europe.
One Peruvian I met told about growing up in an
Opus Dei household and how his father forbade him to be alone at
any time with his mother and sisters. Thus as a boy he lived on
the streets and never went home before 8pm, when his father would
most likely be home from work. (Boys could not be alone in the
house with females of any age -- so much for sexual common sense.)
In addition, the family prayed the rosary on their knees on
upturned bottle caps and were expected to bleed. Piety of pain
indeed. Not, alas, the pain of the world -- the suffering of
others that can be relieved by acts of compassion -- but
self-inflicted pain.
In many ways the film is a monument to
sadomasochism. By emphasizing the worst eighteen hours of Jesus'
life and leaving most of his teachings out of the movie, Gibson
makes Jesus a victim rather than a martyr while removing Jesus's
passion for justice and substituting the term "passion"
to mean passive victim. [Remember Jesus chose to do God's will in
the Garden of Gethsemane; so he was not a mere passive
"victim".]
Our culture is deeply engaged in
sadomasochism -- understood here as the "haves" lording
over the "have-nots". How so? Let's take contemporary
capitalism and the world distribution of wealth and power as an
example: In the 1960s, the overall income of the richest 20
percent of the world's population was thirty times that of the
poorest 20 percent. Today, it is 224 times larger! In the1960s,
the richest 20 percent held 70 percent of the world¹s
revenues; in 1999 it was 85 percent. Today the income of the
richest 225 people in the world is equal to the income of 3
billion poor people. The income of the three richest people in the
world is equal to the collective national incomes of the poorest
forty-nine countries! It would take no more than 5 per cent of the
overall annual sales of arms in the world to feed all the starving
children, to protect them from dying of preventable diseases, and
to make basic education accessible to all.
Yet Gibson's
Jesus shows none of the passion for justice that served as a
corrective to the sadomasochistic tendencies of his own culture
and times, and barely opens the door to issues of soul and society
that could serve as correctives to our culture and times. Where is
the compassion, human dignity, and love that lie at the very heart
of Christ's teachings? You don't cure sadomasochism with more
sadomasochism and by legitimizing it with religious
sentiment.
Gibson's rejection of Vatican II (which, among
other things, apologized for the church's long and sorry history
of blaming Jesus' death on Jews and its primary role in fueling
anti-Semitism over the centuries), gives one a sense of where his
piety lies. I lived for one year, unknowingly, in Paris with a
family that was "integriste" or extreme right wing
Catholics who like Gibson would only attend Mass in Latin and who
like Gibson rejected Vatican II. They said that "Vatican II
was a Jewish and Freemason conspiracy." Thoroughly
anti-Semite, they denied that Jesus was Jewish. [Gibson's father
is commonly known to hold that the holocaust did not occur or was
greatly over-exaggerated... a common tenet of "catholics"
of his ilk.]
Gibson tells us that people who object to his
movie are actually objecting to the Gospels, but in fact the movie
owes much more to the medieval practice of the Stations of the
Cross which is a practice of meditating on Jesus's trial, his
carrying of the cross to his crucifixion and a nineteenth century
nun's visions named Anne Catherine Emmerich than it does to the
Gospels. It is in the Stations of the Cross practice that we are
told Jesus fell three times; that Veronica wiped his face with a
veil; etc.-- all scenes graphically depicted in the film.
Mixing
all of the gospels into one narrative, as Gibson does, is artistic
license but it is not history. The gospels themselves lack
historicity, as in their muddling of the Pharisees and Sadducees,
and their bias against Judaism stems from the fact that they were
written after the fall of the Temple, long after Jesus' death.
They also let Pontius Pilate off the hook (which this movie does
in spades).
Religious imagery is not a private matter; it
is a profoundly public matter. Medieval mystic Meister Eckhart
said that "all the names we give to God come from an
understanding of ourselves." If we apply this insight to this
film, we learn that the images Gibson gives to Christ reveal much
about himself. As one viewer said, they reveal a tough childhood
supposedly when his father must have taken him to the woodshed
with a belt and a whipping. The point being that the God
represented in this film is not a God whom I would want to worship
in any form whatsoever or whom I could recommend others
worship.
It is no wonder, then, that this film is being
seen by so many Christian groups whose piety is built more on fear
than it is on love and hope, more on sin than on blessing, more on
victimization than on liberation. It provides a logical haven for
fall/redemption religious world views. No wonder Gibson leaves out
so much of the message of Jesus: It is not compatible with fascism
which is about control and not justice, about power-over, not
power-with (compassion).
It is one of the signs of our
times that new generations born since the
defeat of fascism in
World War II (and the attempt to throw off fascism in the Catholic
Church in the Second Vatican Council), know very little about
fascism. I recently met a twenty-six year old college graduate who
did not know what fascism was. It is a scandal that our Congress
appropriates millions of dollars to build monuments to the heroes
of World War II but apparently very little to educate youth (or
itself?) about the lessons to be learned from the purpose of that
war: To defeat fascism.
Susan Sontag has defined fascism as
"institutionalized violence." I would define it as
authoritarianism, an authoritarianism that swamps all else--
conscience, community, human rights, justice -- and that in the
process legitimizes violence. Fascism is a philosophy of
disempowerment based on fear, power over (sadism), power under
(masochism), victimhood, and scapegoating.
Fascism
seems to need religion and even religious piety to wrap around
itself and render feelings of pious sentiment and
self-righteousness. Its God is the God of Authoritarianism.
(Cardinal Ratzinger, the present pope's right hand man and current
inquisitor general, is a devote of authoritarianism. It is in this
context that the late theologian Dorothy Soelle wrote of a new
"Christofascism" coming to the fore in our
day.
Recently a political scientist, Dr. Lawrence Britt,
wrote an article naming fourteen characteristics of fascism. He
based his study on an examination of the regimes of Hitler,
Mussolini, Franco, Suharto and Pinochet. (For the record, we need
to remind ourselves that four of these men were Roman Catholics
never excommunicated by their church -- all except Suharto.) A
summary of Britt's points follow.
1. Powerful and
continuing nationalism employing constant use of patriotic
slogans, symbols, songs, flags.
2. Disdain for the recognition
of human rights because security needsoutweigh human rights which
can be ignored.
3. Using enemies as scapegoats for a unifying
cause.
4. Supremacy of the military.
5. Rampant sexism
including more rigid gender roles and anti-gaylegislation.
6.
Controlled mass media.
7. Obsession with national security
driven by a politics of fear.
8. Religion and Government are
intertwined especially in rhetoric employed by its leaders.
9.
Corporate power is protected -- industrial and business
aristocracies put government leaders into power and keep them
there, creating a mutuallybeneficial business/government
relationship and power elite.
10. Labor power, which represents
one of the few threats to fascism,issuppressed.
11. Disdain for
intellectuals and the arts and hostility to higher education along
with censorship of arts or refusal to support the arts.
12.
Obsession with crime and punishment.
13. Rampant cronyism and
corruption.
14. Fraudulent Elections.
One does not have
to be a paranoid to see these elements alive and well in the USA
in 2004. To encourage this through pious film-making underscores
the danger. Perhaps we can thank Mel Gibson for opening up
possibilities to discuss fascism once again including its strange
mix of politics and very strange religious notions. One wonders
who will be the beneficiary of Mr. Gibson's billion dollar profit
on the crucifixion of Jesus? Will it lead to more Opus Dei bishops
in North America? More mixing of right-wing politics and
right-wing religion and right-wing media? Stay tuned.
In
the multi-million dollar campaign to get churches to support this
movie, a four-color flyer was sent to most churches in the country
that boasted the following headline: "Dying was Jesus' Reason
For Living." It is difficult to imagine a slogan more
contradictory to the facts of Jesus' life or his teaching or
indeed of that of the Christ who in John's gospel says: "I
have come that you may have life and have it in abundance."
Mel
Gibson ought to read the great spiritual genius Ernest Holmes who
writes: "The will of God is never toward suffering. Man must
constantly reaffirm his belief in the Infinite Goodness if he
expects to exclude the idea of evil from his thoughts. God's Will
is always toward Life and more Life....the life within you is
God".
Holmes
got Jesus' message right. But the slogan Gibson invokes, "Dying
was Jesus' reason for living," sick as it is, tells the true
story about this film and the piety behind it. What we have here
is a clear case of religion as necrophilia. From this movie we
learn that necrophilia (love of death) is more important than
biophilia (love of life).
Here lies the ultimate scare of
the movie and its success. It speaks to and elicits from people in
our culture a desire to wallow in necrophilia at the expense of
biophilia. (I do not recall an ounce of biophilia much less humor
in the movie.) I am reminded of the wise warning from Erich Fromm
in his brilliant study on evil, An Anatomy of Human
Destructiveness. He writes: "Necrophilia grows when biophilia
is stunted." And this is how evil is unleashed in the world.
(Remember that the opposite of evil is not good; it is the
Sacred.)
Russian Orthodox philosopher Nicolas Berdyaev
warned about a "decadent humility" that "keeps
humanity in a condition of repression and oppression, chaining its
creative power." And Rabbi Abraham Heschel reminded us that
prophets do not become such from a life of asceticism, but from
passion FOR life. Clearly, a movie like this kills creativity and
the prophetic spirit in its appeal to pain and gore.
The
question of "who killed Jesus?" is a silly question in
the sense that it was done 2000 years ago. NO ONE alive today
killed Jesus. How could we? We were not there. We are fully
capable of killing the Christ, however, that is the God-self (or
Buddha nature [or whatever all the great religions refer to it
as]) in all beings. We do this when we destroy rain forests,
render species extinct, starve the children, refuse health care to
the people, allow starvation and unjust distribution of the
earth¹s resources-- in short when we ignore the teachings of
Isaiah and Jesus and others about the need for justice and
compassionate works.
What
a shame that Mel Gibson, with all his potential access to decent
theologians and today's contemporary scholarship about the healthy
Jewish roots of the historical Jesus, chose to make a film based
on false history, contradicting Gospels, anti-Semitic overtones,
fascist piety and necrophilia. Hopefully, prophetic forces of
biophilia will resist.
The above article was written by:
Mathew Fox
Note:
The above review expresses perfectly why there needs to be an
alternative movie to Gibson's, The Passion. I couldn't
agree more with Dr. Fox. Thank you Matt!
To
understand the levels of consciousness, please take the time to
read these books by David R. Hawkins, MD., PhD.
POWER VS.
FORCE
THE EYE OF THE I
REALITY and SUBJECTIVITY
( see
David R. Hawkins website http://www.veritaspub.com
Jesus
of India was published October 23, 2000 by Xlibris, Inc.
It is available directly from the publisher as a trade paperback
or e-book. You may also purchase online from the major online book
retailers. ENJOY!
You
Can Order Jesus of India from:
The
links below take you directly to the online book vendors, should
you wish to purchase Jesus of India.
http://www.amazon.com
http://www.bn.com
http://www.borders.com
http://www.xlibris.com/jesusofindia.html
Xlibris
is the publisher.
I
wish to thank you for the time you have spent on my site.
MaySource
bless you!
Jesus
of India
Copyright
© 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2006
by
Maury Lee
Contact
Information
Electronic
mail: maurylee#swbell.net
(replace
the # with @ to email)
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