As a Christian, I will always be grateful to Mel Gibson for
The Passion of the Christ. Throughout my life I’ve taken
in the various attempts to portray different portions of the life
of Jesus and have always been left just a little underwhelmed.
The Passion struck deep and hard. I think every Christian
believer who saw the film could say, “This is the story of my Lord.
This is the cost of sin and the price of justice and
holiness.”
I am also grateful for the lasting value of art, because if
Gibson were a politician, rather than an artist, he would have
thrown away everything he’d built in one rage-filled gesture.
Instead, the work stands and will remain a defining portrayal of
Gospel events for many years.
What I am not grateful for is the contribution Gibson has made
to the standing libel against people who take their Christian faith
seriously. No matter how much proof is obtained via survey or real
life experience, foundationless moralizers on the left will
proclaim that everyone knows every Christian soul conceals an
anti-semite obsessed with the way the Jews killed their Lord. The
news media will continue to believe ridiculous stories like those
suggesting the vice-presidential candidacy of Joseph Lieberman
would harm Al Gore’s prospects with Christian voters in 2000.
Gibson carried our banner for a little while and he let us down
this time. I pray better things are ahead for a man who has, over
the last few years, has proven he was so much more than anyone
previously believed, and yet less as well.