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Veröffentlichungen 2004
This film portrays the last hours of the life of Jesus of Nazareth
- from his arrest in the Garden of Gethsemane to the removal of his
body from the cross. Its impressive picture of the extreme brutality
of his suffering and death has great visual impact. In his depiction
of the violence used on the victim Jesus, Gibson, who is a practising
Catholic Christian, gives a historically accurate account of the
torments to which those condemned to crucifixion by the Romans were
exposed. This staged orgy of deliberate maltreatment inflicted on
political rebels and slaves was a bloody reality repeated tens of
thousands of times in the Roman empire. So Gibson's film offers a
healthy corrective to mollycoddling treatments of the saviour, old and
new, which lead to forgetfulness of the cruelty of his execution, and
of the fact that the 'Lord' of numerically the greatest religion on
earth died a criminal's death on the cross two thousand years ago.
The main historical basis for the film is the accounts of the
suffering of Jesus, which Christians call his passion, in the four New
Testament Gospels. Everything that the Gospels say about the
circumstances of the trial of Jesus - from the hatred of Jesus by the
Jewish leaders and the Jewish people to the declaration of his
innocence by Pilate - is skilfully staged in the film. So Mel Gibson
simply translates the content of the biblical reports into action. But
here the problem begins. It has long been known that the early
Christians wrongly put the blame for the death of Jesus on the
'unbelieving Jews'. By translating this theological interpretation
into powerful images on film, Gibson is encouraging anti-Semitism,
whether he intended to or not.
The discussion of the film should pay attention to three things:
(a) the key statements about Jewish guilt for the death of Jesus in
the New Testament passion narratives have no historical foundation,
but are rooted in Christian propaganda; (b) most of the details of the
passion narratives go back to later 'theological' interpretations and
are uninterested in historical truth; (c) Jesus did not want to die
for the sins of the world. He expected the kingdom of God, but the
church came.
Göttingen, 3 March 2004
Dr. Gerd Lüdemann, Georg-August-University Göttingen, Germany
Some Critical Comments on Mel Gibson's movie The Passion of Christ in the Light of Historical Criticism
In memoriam Paul Winter
PDF-Dokument