If I ever own a Christian bookstore called "Stuff Christians Buy," I already know what my first bestseller is going to be. I'm going to package the movies Braveheart, the Matrix and Passion of the Christ together. It will be called "the fight, the future and the father." And the headline on the posters will say stuff like, "It's not a trilogy of movies, it's the trinity of movies" or the simple but powerful, "Buy God's favorite movies."Will you buy a copy? Hopefully, but even if you don't, I think adding the movie Braveheart to it will guarantee that it sells a kazillion copies. We Christians love this movie. Seriously, when it came out, it stirred up quite a potpourri of faith and testosterone. Here, was finally someone that represented the intensity and struggle for freedom that Christ did when he led that violent uprising that involved washing people's feet and healing them. Wait, what? Jesus wasn't exactly like William Wallace? Are you sure? I've read a lot of Christian books that compare the exploits of Wallace to what it means to be a Christian. In fact, here are a few things I learned:
1. My wife wants to be rescued.
Despite vehemently disagreeing that I need a sword in the house, my wife wants to be rescued. She wants me on a horse with some sort of weird Scottish dredlocks like Mel Gibson and she wants to be carried away over my shoulder. What's that you say? Wallace's wife gets her throat cut in the movie? He didn't rescue her? Oh, well I didn't mean that one anyway. I mean his second lady friend. Fine, I'll edit that. "My second wife wants to be rescued."
2. God has a crazy adventure planned for me.
Does helping out with the youth ministry involve arrows that are lit aflame or any sort of catapult device? No? How about swinging battle axes or mooning people? Will I get to do any of that? No? Then I'm sorry, I won't be able to help. I am now comparing the size of whatever God calls me to the liberation of the country of Scotland. So unless the director's cut of Braveheart contains a scene in which they help stack chairs after church, I'm not doing it either. Freeeeeddddooooommm!
3. Jesus was a brawler.
Look at that verse where he clears the temple. Jesus is wild. He's intense and violent and leading a revolution. No forget that, he's leading an xRevolution, which is like a revolution only a million times more relevant to today's culture. I mean check out how he cuts off that Roman soldier's ear when they come to arrest him. Jesus was a ninja! Huh? That wasn't him? He healed that dude? One of his last physical actions was to wash people's feet and heal the guard? You are ruining Braveheart for me right now. I hate you.
I probably just spoiled my chances of being in the sequel to Braveheart. I can live with that. I'll just bundle it with my "fight, future and father" movie package. I'll call them the "four horseman" and sell mugs that say, "I'd rather be watching the sequel to Braveheart than drinking this coffee." It's all coming together now. Empire here I come.
Thank you, Jon. Though probably not the intent of your post, you have somehow managed to absolve me of the guilt I've always felt at never being able to make it all the way through The Sacred Romance despite three separate attempts!
ReplyDeleteI hate you, too.
ReplyDeleteBut only because you started it.
I never really thought of Braveheart in spiritual terms. I guess that's because most of my thoughts during that movie are about how much I love Scottish accents. Whoops.
ReplyDeleteAll I ever really wanted was to wear a kilt... Does that effect my Christianity?
ReplyDeleteHa ha! I can't COUNT how many times Braveheart was used in a sermon illustration at a church I attended. But hey - it certainly woke up the church-sleepers, eh?
ReplyDeleteI hope the Eldridge Mafia doesn't bump you off over this....
ReplyDeleteI think "Stuff Christians Buy" should probably also sell Gods and Generals and The Lord of the Rings movies. They may not be the trinity of movies, but they've definitely made it to the level of "apostolic."
John Eldredge is SO coming to fight you right now. And he totally deleted you off of his facebook.
ReplyDeleteAt my old church's youth group I think every guy knew every line to the movie and quoted it incessantly during any evangelism trip or camp or anything. I always felt out of place because I've only seen it once and I certainly didn't know every word.
ReplyDeleteI always thought it's weird that at times we compare the fight against The Adversary as some kind of huge epic movie (ala Braveheart) because I always felt it was more a Cold War than a big epic battle.
I hope your first wife doesn't know about the second one though.
Braveheart II - aka - The Patriot.
ReplyDeleteYou need to make "Man on Fire" as an added bonus.
ReplyDeletethe best way to ruin everyone's buzz after watching braveheart is to casually mention as the credits start that scotland still belongs to the english eight hundred years later. that's usually a crowd pleaser.
ReplyDeleteThis post was awesome. My husband and I have had this conversation about Braveheart. Thanks for the great post.
ReplyDeleteReally....every movie and every book and story is inherently "Christian." How? Because Christianity is a total collection of every deep truth in the world. Therefore, when anyone makes a movie or writes a book, all they have to work with is "God's truth." They have to borrow form God and work with what He made. Sooooooo everything we see, even Harry Potter (i.e. harry was raised from the dead), etc., even things made to be "against God" contain Christian truths in them...they have nothing else to "use." Things like good vs. evil, spiritual vs. material, love, hate, violence, etc. All created by God.
ReplyDeleteI am envisioning "Stuff Christians Buy..."
ReplyDelete- The impulse buy counter is nothing but Skittles in all varieties.
- The food section is stocked with bootleg cookies and orange drink. (No name brands here, folks.)
- You can buy all the oldies but goodies on both CD and cassette: Sandi Patti, Carmen, Amy Grant, etc.
- Psalty has his own section, and there's a moniter in the corner looping his video 24/7.
- Specialty Frisbee section.
- Eagle and unicorn figurines galore. (But no Precious Moments or Willow Tree.)
- The Bibles are sold alongside the GI Joe figures they represent.
- Each Super Pastor gets his books sold in conjunction with a comic book of their superhero.
- Only pants and shorts with NO WRITING are sold.
- Bumper stickers with the following phrases:
"The Butt is Not a Billboard"
"I kissed dating good-bye and it promptly punched me in the neck."
"My kid makes the other kids cry in Sunday School."
"Booty, God, Booty"
"Get Your Yolk On"
- It includes a coffee shop named "Holy Roast."
- If you bring in a doodled-on bulletin, you get a free package of goldfish crackers.
- You get a complimentary side hug on your way out.
That was fun. Additions, people?
http://thedirtyshame.blogspot.com/2008/05/new-mens-movement.html
ReplyDeleteHaha. Nice post!
ReplyDeleteBraveheart probably has to be one of my all-time favorite movies. Love it.
This post is made of win. I enjoyed the movie, but I've grown so weary of Eldridge's disciples using it as the archetype for the Christian man.
ReplyDeleteIt was actually Peter who was the first Christian ninja! But Jesus put the ear back.
ReplyDeleteNow I can't help but laughing as I'm seeing Jesus and the 11 busting out some sweet ninja moves in the garden.
hey, so i'm not the only person who thinks that there is such a thing as the John Eldredge Mafia (or, JEM). blogged about this yesterday and today.
ReplyDeleteactually, if you work in youth ministry you may get to moon people, or play with arrows (if not, atleast rockets). But it really all depends on the youth ministry you are involved in.
ReplyDeleteBTW. I am a youth minister and this year we are taking your advice to hopefully not give bad graduation gifts. Next week when we take our graduating seniors out for dinner we will be presenting them with official weight 175 gram frisbees. thanks for the idea.
I LOVE Braveheart. That's probably my second or third favorite movie of all time. There are very attractive qualities to William Wallace that all men should want to have. His passion is intense, his leadership and motivation are inspirational, etc. However, his main flaw is that he is motivated by revenge. Jesus is the exact opposite. If He was motivated by revenge, then we'd all be screwed. Thank God that He isn't. I have talked about Braveheart before in some sermons and messages, but I always focus on the good and the bad. It is very dangerous to talk about all of his positives, but none of the negatives. However, he is still a good example, but I think it is time to put it to rest... kinda like the "frog in the boiling water" example you talked about in a previous post.
ReplyDeleteI'm surprised that you mentioned Braveheart, but not Gladiator. On my facebook profile, under my favorite movies, I put Gladheart and Braviator, because it seems like they're pretty much interchangeable.
Okay, Jon. I've been missing reading your blogs for several days now. How very happy and excited I was to see "Remix - #9. Comparing Braveheart to Christianity". Are you trying to hurt me? You know how I love my Braveheart! I'll agree that the movie isn't an allegory, but you can't tell me you can't draw comparisons between Peter and Robert the Bruce. For me, that's the most compelling story in the movie. Not to mention that Robert the Bruce is a total hottie...
ReplyDeleteThis is fantastic!
ReplyDeleteBut I think you need to add the movie "The Princess Bride" to your movie pack. Pretty much every Christian ever has seen that movie. In fact, it might even deserve its own post.
The sequel to Braveheart? the one where the Scots live alongside the English under the United Kingdom banner and you can cross the border as easily as driving onto Walmart car park, we have the same language and the same currency...
ReplyDeleteSeriously. John Eldredge is totally going to kick your ass. :) Have you read those books? He tracks animals and lives in the wild. Lookout.
ReplyDeleteps- LOVING the JEM idea.
english greg,
ReplyDeletethe scot i know hates that movie. growing up learning his country's history, then to see an american blockbuster depict it was "horrifying in its inaccuracies."
then to have to come work in the US and right when everyone had just bought it on dvd, was a trial.
all the women thought his accent was dreamy (it is, and he's single) and all the men wanted to talk war and revenge and scottish history nonstop.
he is a christian, but HATES the movie, especially how much americans love it.
jon, you should hire sara to work at SCB
ReplyDeleteDarn.
ReplyDeleteNe'er-Do-Good beat me to it.
Sara, that was awesome! I would totally shop there. Can you build one in Texas?
ReplyDeleteRead Jesus for President...just do it now...you can throw me a parade later, seriously.Shaine Claiborne is like the young underdog of christian writers...dreadlocks, homemade clothes, and crazy stories of life with homeless philadelphians. like everything you ever thought was stupid about christianity in america, such as the Braveheart=Jesus equation, all rolled into one lovely Juno-esque style book. Oh and go watch the movie Juno too if you havn't already...then feel free to throw that parade for me.
ReplyDeleteOk, ok. So I'm not saying this definitely happened, but what if...?
ReplyDeleteWhat if Jesus was a brawler? This is completely reading into the text something that most likely isn't there, but you never know. In John 10, Jesus says that He and the Father are One, and the Jews are pretty mad. So mad, in fact, that they want to stone Him. Verse 29 says, "Again they tried to seize him, but he escaped their grasp."
So I'm thinking Jesus was Jessie Owens fast or he was pretty quick with his right. Imagine someone trying to capture Jesus and He knows that it's not time yet. A quick punch to the face and He's off. It's possible, right? I'm not saying this characterizes Jesus or even that it happened... but it's possible. Jon, I'd love to hear your thoughts on this rediculous heretical blasphemous out of context assumption.