Dear Brethren,
From time to time I send you articles that are sent to me
that I feel will be helpful to you. In the areas of health I well
realize we always need to do all we can to maintain and even build it as
much as we can therefore anything I can send that I feel will be helpful I
will make the effort of passing them on to you.
With this writing I am passing on a note from Mr. White (a
member) in Australia along with some in-depth research in the making of the
very popular movie, The Passion.
I have read comments from ministers and others both pro and
con whether a member should see it or not. Not having seen it myself, I can
only pass on what I believe to be some very definite things that you as
members of God's Church should have in mind in the event you are planning on
seeing it.
At the same time I realize some of you have already seen this
movie and were moved very much because of it being portrayed so graphically.
Some little time ago I was asked by a lady whether she should
go and see it. I told her that I had no real objection where a member
is soundly based in the Scriptures and therefore able to see the wrong in
it. Not having seen the movie myself I was basing this on the movie of the
10 commandments that I have seen probably a dozen times as well as other
religious movies I have seen over the years.
From what I have read and comments made, it appears
this movie is completely different from the others! It would also seem that
the timing of this movie plays a very big part and has some very dark
forebodings for the future of the Jews and at the same time designed to
prepare the viewer's mind to be receptive for other things to follow.
It can cause a person to drop his and her guard if one is not
very careful and become more tolerant and receptive to this false false
church and the evil of this world.
Satan has the same purpose for this movie as he does for all
of the movies that come out of Hollywood. There are the demonical movies
and movies putting lesbians and homosexuals in a favorable light that makes
the mind more tolerant toward the abominable sins of these people. The same
is true with the cursing and foul language along with the terrible violence;
men and women having sex with one another on screen, men and women living
together without marriage, etc., etc.
I am only reminding you of things you already know. Please
always remember who you are and the fact we must always sigh and cry for the
evil we see rather than becoming receptive and tolerant to it (Ezekiel 9).
A movie like this that is suppose to be based on truth can be
very misleading when we consider how the fallout of it affect us if we are
not careful.
I cannot command you not to see the movie. Rather I encourage
you to be on guard always whether it is seeing this movie or whatever other
areas Satan will come at us.
To help you to better make up your mind whether you should
want to see it or not, please read the comment by Mr. White and also the
research that is below his comment to help you to better understand what is
behind the movie, the Passion.
Our love and prayers,
Don Billingsley
Sent: Wednesday, April 21, 2004 5:48 AM
Subject: Five Reasons Not to Go See The Passion of the Christ
While the movie may bring to life the sufferings of Christ, it really does
represent the first steps toward the coming rise of RCC (and its European
allies) which will become the political and military rival to the liberal
Anglo-Saxon-Keltic nations.
I find it amazing how easy some of the elect are deceived by this movie -
wait until greater events occur - how easy for more of them to be deceived.
The RCC's siren call is only just commencing - it will grow louder, more
cunning and more appealing over the months and years ahead. Fall prey to
this one, and one will be easier prey to the next ...
Craig
http://www.providencepca.com/essays/passion.html
Five Reasons Not to Go See The Passion of the Christ
By Andrew J. Webb
On February 25, 2004 Icon films, will be releasing Mel Gibson's much
anticipated film The Passion of the Christ. The date of the release was
deliberately chosen to coincide with the Roman Catholic holy day of Ash
Wednesday, and is indicative of the fact that for Gibson, his film was more
of a work of devotion than a money making enterprise. In an interview on the
Roman Catholic Television Network EWTN, Gibson candidly stated why this
movie is so different from all his others, "It reflects my beliefs-I've
never done that before."1
<http://www.providencepca.com/essays/passion.html#footnote1>
He is also
quite open about his desire to see his movie used for worldwide evangelism.
Many noted Evangelicals including James Dobson and Billy Graham have also
come forward to endorse The Passion of the Christ and recommend its use as a
teaching tool. Currently, The Passion of the Christ is riding a groundswell
of nationwide support from both Evangelicals and Roman Catholics, with many
well-known Evangelical congregations, such as best selling author and Pastor
Rick Warren's Saddleback Church which purchased 18,000 tickets at seven
theatres, doing everything they can to ensure that The Passion of the Christ
will be a smash hit amongst Christians and "seekers". Expressing a widely
held view amongst the film's supporters, Lisa Wheeler, associate editor of
Catholic Exchange, a Web portal dedicated to Catholic evangelism, told the
Atlanta Journal-Constitution, "It's the best evangelization opportunity
we've had since the actual death of Jesus."2
<http://www.providencepca.com/essays/passion.html#footnote2>
But should Evangelicals be supporting The Passion of the Christ and
endorsing its use as an Evangelism tool? Is this really the best
evangelization opportunity we've had since the actual death of Jesus?3
<http://www.providencepca.com/essays/passion.html#footnote3>
After careful
consideration my conclusion is an unequivocal "No." Here then are five
reasons why I believe Evangelicals should not see or recommend the Passion
of the Christ.
1) Its Origins: Even though Evangelicals are promoting The Passion of the
Christ, it is not an Evangelical movie. As Mel Gibson, a devout Roman
Catholic put it so well; "It reflects my beliefs." The Passion of the Christ
is a Roman Catholic movie, made by a Roman Catholic director, with Roman
Catholic theological advisers, which gained the endorsement of Pope John
Paul II who said after viewing it, "It is as it was."4
<http://www.providencepca.com/essays/passion.html#footnote4>
This is in
marked contrast to the Jesus film, which is unabashedly Protestant and
Evangelical in its production and message and which has been widely used in
evangelizing Roman Catholics. It is largely for this reason that the Jesus
film has not been utilized or endorsed by Roman Catholics. By contrast, The
Passion of the Christ has already proven its effectiveness as an evangelism
tool in producing Catholic conversions and encouraging Catholic devotion:
"In his first nationally broadcast interview about his starring role in Mel
Gibson's much-anticipated film "The Passion of the Christ," James Caviezel -
Gibson's Jesus - detailed on Friday the ordeal of filming the Crucifixion
scenes, noting that the overall experience prompted many in the crew to
convert to Catholicism."
"Noting "the amount of conversions on the movie," he said the experience of
filming Christ's story "really changed people's lives."
"Caviezel recalled telling Gibson, "I think it's very important that we have
mass every day - at least I need that to play this guy."
"I felt if I was going to play him I needed [the sacrament] in me. So
[Gibson] provided that."5
<http://www.providencepca.com/essays/passion.html#footnote5>
2) Its Script: Although it is widely thought that the script for the movie
is based entirely on the gospel according to John, this is not the case. The
script for The Passion of the Christ contains much extrabiblical material,
and is based in part on a mystical Roman Catholic devotional work by an 18th
century German Nun (Sister Anne Emmerich) entitled The Dolorous Passion of
the Christ. Gibson stated on EWTN that reading Emmerich's book was his
primary inspiration for making the movie. By introducing extrabiblical
elements, not only does The Passion of the Christ change some of the
theological emphases of the Biblical account of Christ's crucifixion, but it
will also create a false impression amongst the very "seekers" that
Evangelicals are trying to reach, that things were said and done at the
crucifixion that did not actually happen. For Evangelicals, who would feel
very uncomfortable with a version of the Bible that put words into the mouth
of Christ that He never spoke, to endorse a movie that does the very same
thing seems hopelessly inconsistent. Protestants traditionally rejected the
Apocrypha precisely because these books were fabricated and contained
inauthentic material, despite the fact that these books might have been
useful for evangelism. For modern evangelicals to embrace a vehicle that is
inauthentic in order to achieve evangelistic ends indicates a serious
decline in faithfulness.
The script for The Passion of the Christ not only adds things that didn't
occur in the Bible, it cuts out other things that did. The most widely known
example of this being the important declaration, "His blood be on us and on
our children." (Matthew 27:25)
The script for The Passion of the Christ was translated into Aramaic and
Latin by Father William Fulco, an old friend of Mel Gibson's. This was not
done for reasons of making it more authentic.6
<http://www.providencepca.com/essays/passion.html#footnote6>
The language
decisions in the Passion of the Christ were made for theological reasons:
"It is crucial to realize that the images and language at the heart of "The
Passion of the Christ" flow directly out of Gibson's personal dedication to
Catholicism in one of its most traditional and mysterious forms - the
16th-century Latin Mass.
"I don't go to any other services," the director told the Eternal Word
Television Network. "I go to the old Tridentine Rite. That's the way that I
first saw it when I was a kid. So I think that that informs one's
understanding of how to transcend language. Now, initially, I didn't
understand the Latin. ... But I understood the meaning and the message and
what they were doing. I understood it very fully and it was very moving and
emotional and efficacious, if I may say so."
The goal of the movie is to shake modern audiences by brashly juxtaposing
the "sacrifice of the cross with the sacrifice of the altar - which is the
same thing," said Gibson. This ancient union of symbols and sounds has never
lost its hold on him. There is, he stressed, "a lot of power in these dead
languages."
Thus, the seemingly bizarre choice of Latin and Aramaic was actually part of
the message." 7 <http://www.providencepca.com/essays/passion.html#footnote7>
The script of The Passion of the Christ was specifically intended to link
the crucifixion of Christ with what Roman Catholics believe is the
re-sacrificing of Christ that occurs in the mass. Gibson's intent is to show
us that the sacrifice of the cross and the sacrifice of the altar (the mass)
are the same thing. Protestant Evangelicals have historically rejected the
idea that Christ can be sacrificed again and declared it "abominable."
Speaking of the concept that the Crucifixion and the mass is the same thing,
the Protestant Westminster Confession declares:
"In this sacrament, Christ is not offered up to his Father; nor any real
sacrifice made at all, for remission of sins of the quick or dead; but only
a commemoration of that one offering up of himself, by himself, upon the
cross, once for all: and a spiritual oblation of all possible praise unto
God, for the same: so that the popish sacrifice of the mass (as they call
it) is most abominably injurious to Christ's one, only sacrifice, the alone
propitiation for all the sins of his elect."8
<http://www.providencepca.com/essays/passion.html#footnote8>
3) Its Theology: Gibson's comment about the sacrifice of the altar and the
sacrifice of the cross shows the indispensable link in this movie between
the Catholic view of Christ's sacrifice and the portrayal of the Crucifixion
in The Passion of the Christ. The fact that Evangelicals have uncritically
endorsed it speaks volumes about how far the Evangelical Protestant
understanding of Christ's death and the related subject of Justification
have slipped since the Reformation. In Roman Catholic theology the intense
physical suffering of Christ's Crucifixion is the focus along with the
emphasis on physical sacrifice. This is one of the reasons why in Roman
Catholic iconography we have so much imagery related to Christ's physical
pain and that crucifixes show him still suffering on the cross (the
sacrifice of the mass means that Christ's declaration that His once for all
sacrifice is completed - "it is finished" (John 19:30) never actually comes,
and that His suffering has to be constantly repeated). This emphasis on
Christ's physical agony is repeated in Roman Catholic devotional material,
prayers, and of course the Passion of the Christ. The theology of the bible
however points out to us that the grand importance of Christ's crucifixion
lay not in His physical suffering, but in His once for all propitiation of
God's wrath (1 John 4:10). Lest we forget, the greatest torment that Christ
experienced on the cross was not caused by the nails driven into His flesh,
but in His being made "sin for us" and vicariously suffering the righteous
punishment of the Father in our place. Even the worst physical torments
inflicted by the Sanhedrin and the Romans upon Jesus were nothing by
comparison to the anguish of having the sins of all the elect imputed to Him
and making full satisfaction for them. Satisfying the justice of the Romans
on a cross was comparatively easy, thousands of condemned men and women
including Spartacus and several of the Apostles did that, but only Christ
could satisfy the justice of God.
Also central to the Christian Gospel, but missing from The Passion of the
Christ, is the concept of Christ's active obedience. Christ not only died
for the sins of His sheep on the cross but He established their
righteousness through His perfect obedience to God's Law. It is only if His
passive obedience in dying on the cross and His active obedience in keeping
the law are imputed to believers per 2 Cor. 5:21 that believers will be
justified before almighty God. The Passion of the Christ does not even make
any pretence of teaching the active obedience of Christ, the entire notion
of which is alien to Roman Catholic theology. Therefore if Evangelicals
intend to use this as a Gospel teaching tool, they must understand that at
best they are teaching only half a gospel, and that the half they are
teaching is defectively presented.
The sacrifice of Christ was a glorious event in which, in accordance with
God's plan, full satisfaction for sin was procured by Christ on behalf of
His people (Acts 2:43). The Passion of the Christ leaves us with a vision of
the sacrifice of Christ that is only dolorous (Dolorous: Full of grief; sad;
sorrowful; doleful; dismal) and which puts into sharp relief the Roman
Catholic notion not only of the importance of Christ's agony, but that of
Mary in "offering her Son." In an interview with Zenit, the Roman Catholic
News Service, Father Thomas Rosica, the priest who oversaw World Youth Day
2002 and its Way of the Cross through the streets of Toronto, illustrated
how The Passion of the Christ, in keeping with Roman Catholic theology, uses
extrabiblical content to massively exaggerate the role of Mary:
"One scene, in particular, was very moving. As Jesus falls on the Way of the
Cross, there is a flashback to his falling on a Jerusalem street as a child,
and his mother running out of the house to pick him up. The interplay of
Mary and Jesus in this film is moving, and reaches its apex in the scene of
the Pietà.
The Mother of the Lord is inviting each of us to share her grief and behold
her Son."9 <http://www.providencepca.com/essays/passion.html#footnote9>
This use of extra-biblical material, emphasis on physical suffering,
exaggeration of the role of Mary, and explicitly Roman Catholic theology
should not surprise us, however, as these are all hallmarks of the primary
inspiration for this movie: The Dolorous Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ.
Let me give two examples of what I mean especially as concerns the
replacement of physical pain for the far greater agony of sin bearing:
"He will not stretch himself out, but we will help him;' they accompanied
these words with the most fearful oaths and imprecations, and having
fastened a rope to his right leg, dragged it violently until it reached the
wood, and then tied it down as tightly as possible. The agony which Jesus
suffered from this violent tension was indescribable; the words 'My God, my
God,' escaped his lips, and the executioners increased his pain by tying his
chest and arms to the cross, lest the hands should be torn from the nails."
10 <http://www.providencepca.com/essays/passion.html#footnote10>
"The hour of our Lord was at last come; his death-struggle had commenced; a
cold sweat overspread every limb. John stood at the foot of the Cross, and
wiped the feet of Jesus with his scapular. Magdalen was crouched to the
ground in a perfect frenzy of grief behind the Cross. The Blessed Virgin
stood between Jesus and the good thief, supported by Salome and Mary of
Cleophas, with her eyes riveted on the countenance of her dying Son. Jesus
then said: 'It is consummated;' and, raising his head, cried out in a loud
voice, 'Father, into thy hands I commend my spirit.' These words, which he
uttered in a clear and thrilling tone, resounded through heaven and earth;
and a moment after, he bowed down his head and gave up the ghost. I saw his
soul, under the appearance of a bright meteor, penetrate the earth at the
foot of the Cross. John and the holy women fell prostrate on the ground."11
<http://www.providencepca.com/essays/passion.html#footnote11>
Emmerich's book is literally filled with scenes like those above, and
includes many extra-biblical sayings of Jesus which Sister Anne says she
personally heard in her visions.
4) Its Medium: Many Evangelical Pastors are hailing movies like The Passion
of the Christ as part of a new and better way of spreading the Gospel:
"This is a window of opportunity we have. Here's a guy who's putting his
money into a movie that has everything to do with what we do," said pastor
Cory Engel of Harvest Springs Community Church in Great Falls, Mont.
"Churches used to communicate by having a little lecture time on Sunday
morning. People don't interact that way anymore. Here's a chance for us to
use a modern-day technique to communicate the truth of the Bible," the Rev.
Engel said."12 <http://www.providencepca.com/essays/passion.html#footnote12>
It is indeed true that we live in a highly visual and increasingly
anti-literate society that places a premium on sound bites and easily
assimilated visual imagery, but does this mean that we should abandon
preaching in favor of using movies or dramatic presentations? We need to
remember that the last time dramatic presentations replaced preaching as the
main vehicle by which the truth of the Bible was communicated was during the
middle-ages when the church refused to allow the translation of the Bible
into common languages and when in place of the preaching and teaching of
God's word, the common people were given visual presentations such as
Passion Plays, statues, relics, and icons. These things were designed, like
most visual imagery, to play upon the emotions and stimulate a response; but
the ability to evoke an emotional response via imagery or drama is not the
same as successfully transmitting the Gospel. The means that God has
ordained for the transmission of the Gospel, was neither drama, imagery, nor
even "lectures" - it is preaching. Preaching involves the communication of
the Gospel in a way that patiently convinces, rebukes, exhorts, and teaches
(2 Timothy 4:2-4). The bible teaches us the awesome importance of preaching
and why it cannot be replaced by another medium:
We must preach God's Word regardless of how unpopular it is because we are
commanded to do so: "Preach the word! Be ready in season and out of season.
Convince, rebuke, exhort, with all longsuffering and teaching. For the time
will come when they will not endure sound doctrine, but according to their
own desires, because they have itching ears, they will heap up for
themselves teachers; and they will turn their ears away from the truth, and
be turned aside to fables." (2 Timothy 4:2-4)
We must preach God's Word because it always accomplishes the purpose for
which it was sent: "For as the heavens are higher than the earth, So are My
ways higher than your ways, And My thoughts than your thoughts. For as the
rain comes down, and the snow from heaven, And do not return there, But
water the earth, And make it bring forth and bud, That it may give seed to
the sower And bread to the eater, So shall My word be that goes forth from
My mouth; It shall not return to Me void, But it shall accomplish what I
please, And it shall prosper in the thing for which I sent it."
(Isa.55:9-11)
God does not command us to produce dramatic presentations of Gospel themes,
He commands us to preach. Though this option was freely available to the
Apostles as they brought the Gospel to cities with amphitheaters and a long
tradition of using the dramatic arts to convey religious and moral themes to
the populace they did not do so. The wisdom of the Apostolic methodology has
been borne out by the fact that it was when the Gospel was being transmitted
primarily by plays and symbolism that true Christianity began to sink under
the weight of superstition. We are in danger of returning to precisely that
state of affairs by reviving the teaching methodology of the medieval
church. Even though it was produced in the 21st century, The Passion of the
Christ is identical in all critical aspects to the Passion Plays of the
Roman Catholic Church in the Middle Ages.
5) Its Main Character: Billy Graham in his endorsement of The Passion of the
Christ said, "Every time I preach or speak about the Cross, the things I saw
on the screen will be on my heart and mind."13
<http://www.providencepca.com/essays/passion.html#footnote13>
This is
unfortunately part of the problem with all visual representations of Jesus.
Although we may intend for them only to have a role in teaching, they
inevitably become part of our worship and adoration. As a result of seeing
this film James Caviezel, the "Jesus" of The Passion of the Christ, will
become the figure countless thousands if not millions of people think of
when they worship Jesus Christ. To do this is to fall into the trap of
changing "the glory of the incorruptible God into an image made like
corruptible man" (Romans 1:23) and to violate the Second Commandment.
Every visual representation of Jesus is inevitably a lie. There are two main
reasons for this.
The first reason why all visual representations of Jesus are lies is because
the only wise God went to great lengths not to leave us with any description
of the physical appearance of His Son lest we fall into the sin of image
making. Therefore all of our representations of Jesus are inevitably
speculations usually based upon our own desires. We create an image of Jesus
that says more about the Jesus we want than the Jesus whom God sent.
For instance, isn't it remarkable that the Jesus of The Passion of the
Christ, as in almost all physical representations of Christ, is tall, slim,
and handsome? Why should not The Son of David (Luke 18:38) have been a
relatively small man like His great ancestor? It never seems to have
occurred to most image-makers that Jesus could be relatively short, or
stout, or even have had a receding hairline. This is in spite of the fact
that one of the few details the Bible does give us about Christ's appearance
is that "He has no form or comeliness; And when we see Him, There is no
beauty that we should desire Him." (Is. 53:2b) The fact that we have any
concept of what Jesus looks like and that Gibson's Jesus looks like the
traditional Jesus, is a testament to the abiding impact of past iconography.
While the Gospels, purposely leave out any description of Jesus that we
might use to construct an idol, people have created an image of Jesus that
has become almost an industry standard, and it is solely for that reason rather than any basis in fact that audiences would have been outraged had
Gibson cast Danny DeVito and not James Caviezel in the leading role.
The Second reason why all visual representations of Jesus are lies is that
they can never hope to represent the glory of Christ in His true nature. The
best an image of Jesus can do is to represent him as a man, and while Jesus
was truly a man, He was not merely a man. Jesus was also God, and no artist
or filmmaker who has ever lived could hope to create an image that captures
the true Glory of Jesus as God. While this may not appear to be a problem to
us, the separation of Christ's manhood from His deity is actually a grave
heresy called Nestorianism. We must not therefore attempt to separate what
God has forever joined together.
For the first four centuries of its existence the church did not use
pictures of Jesus as an aid to evangelism. This was despite the fact that
they were bringing the gospel to highly visual cultures that had always used
imagery to convey religious ideas. The initial movements towards making
pictures of Christ were initially strongly opposed, and the practice was
formally condemned by the church as late as 753 AD. Unfortunately, once they
had taken hold of the public imagination, the practice of making visible
representations of Christ proved difficult if not impossible to eradicate
and gradually, pictures and dramatic representations of Jesus became quite
commonplace in the church. At the time of the Reformation, Protestants
overwhelmingly rejected the practice of making images of Jesus as a clear
violation of the Second Commandment. They also rejected the notion that such
images had a necessary role as "textbooks for the laity" and then proved
that notion false by producing generations of other Protestants well versed
in the word and familiar with their Savior although they had never once
owned or seen a representation of him.
Rather than visual imagery, they relied on the preaching of the Word to save
souls, and the gospel made great advances. If we return to the use of
imagery and begin endorsing movies like The Passion of the Christ, we will
be returning to the very state of affairs the first Protestants struggled
and died to reform. We must not think that merely endorsing one form of
visible representation of Christ will not lead inevitably to others. For
instance, it is impossible to make a coherent argument against the use of
the crucifix in teaching the Gospel if we have already endorsed the use of a
movie that portrays the crucifixion. Merely because one display is static
and the other moving does not change their essential nature at all. The
Passion of the Christ is in essence, an animated Crucifix.
In closing, let me address a common objection, namely that we must use tools
like The Passion of the Christ in order to reach the lost and that if we
don't we are "missing a great opportunity."
Are we really missing an opportunity though? If we are convinced that using
a Roman Catholic movie to present the Gospel is in essence a violation of
God's law, how could we possibly use it? Should we sin that grace may
abound?
Also, are we really certain that this will be as effective as we think in
saving souls? J. Marcellus Kik in his Pictures of Christ addressed that very
question and gave us some wise advice, which I think all Christians would do
well to heed:
"But can it not help in the saving of souls, it is asked. But how? Looking
at a picture of Christ hanging upon the cross tells me nothing. It does not
tell me that He hung there for sin. It does not tell me that He hung there
for my sin. It does not tell me that He is the Son of God. Only the Word of
God does that. And it is the Word of God that has been given us to tell the
story of salvation through the blood of Christ. It is not through the
foolishness of pictures that sinners are converted but through the
foolishness of preaching.
It is amazing how slowly unscriptural practices enter the Christian Church.
We must at all times go back to the Scriptures. The Bible is our infallible
guide. And if our practices and doctrines do not conform with the teachings
of the Scriptures then we must eliminate them. The Bible instructs the
Church not to make any likeness of Christ. The present day pictures of
Christ are false and no one would make a serious claim that they resemble
Christ upon earth. They separate His humanity from His deity. They do not at
all give us a glimpse of His present glory. They are not condoned by the
inspired apostles.
God has ordained the foolishness of preaching to evangelize the world. He
has promised to attend the preaching of the Word with the power of the Holy
Spirit. The so-called pictures of Christ are a hindrance and a temptation to
idolatry. Let us cleanse the Temple of God from them." 14
<http://www.providencepca.com/essays/passion.html#footnote14>
Perhaps The Passion of the Christ will provide Evangelicals with a great
opportunity after all. They are being given a rare opportunity to reject the
world's methods and to recommit themselves to fulfilling God's commission to
preach the Gospel and to trust that that preaching will always accomplish
what He pleases. Let us hope that they will seize it.
Read more <http://www.providencepca.com/essays/seccomroundup.html>
on the
Relationship between the Second Commandment and Images of Jesus
Endnotes:
1. 13-January-2004 -- EWTNews Feature
http://wwwewtn.com/vnews/getstory.asp?number=42801
2. "Churches Make 'Stunning' Show of Support for Gibson's 'Passion'" Newsmax
(Thursday, Feb. 5, 2004)
3. Interestingly enough, the actual death of Jesus on the cross produced
hardly any conversions. It is the preaching of Christ Crucified that has
historically been "the best opportunity for evangelism"
4. Papal Praise for "The Passion" "It Is as It Was," John Paul II Says ZENIT(2003-12-18)
http://www.zenit.org/english/visualizza.phtml?sid=46445
5. "Mel Gibson's 'Christ' Reveals Crucifixion" Newsmax (Sunday, Jan. 25,
2004 )
6. This is especially true when one considers that all the Gospels were
written in Koine Greek the common language of the area and not Aramaic or
Latin.
7. "The passion of Mel Gibson" By TERRY MATTINGLY, Scripps Howard News
Service, January 21, 2004
8. The Westminster Confession of Faith, Chapter 29.2
9. Father Thomas Rosica on Mel Gibson's "The Passion", National Director of
World Youth Day 2002 Weighs in on Film (2004-02-06)
http://www.zenit.org/english/visualizza.phtml?sid=48636
10. The Dolorous Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ, by Sister Anne Catherine
Emmerich
11. Ibid.
12. "Churches Make 'Stunning' Show of Support for Gibson's 'Passion'",
Newsmax (Thursday, Feb. 5, 2004)
13. "What Others Are Saying"
http://www.passionchrist.org/
14. "Pictures of Christ," by J. Marcellus Kik