By Alan
Caruba
When I was
growing up in the 1950s there were two blockbusters, “The Ten Commandments” and
“Ben-Hur.” Together they pulled in $1.795 billion in adjusted domestic ticket
sales. The power of the Bible, both Old and New Testaments, to draw audiences
is impressive and, in hard times like the present, many seek a message of hope
in religion.
It’s worth
keeping in mind that, according to Pew research, by the end of 2012, a large
majority of Americans—77% of the adult population—identify with a Christian
religion, including 52% who are Protestants, 23% who are Catholic, and 2% who
affiliate with the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, Mormons. Some
18% expressed no explicit religious identity and 5% identified with a
non-Christian religion.
U.S.
Presidents, particularly the Founders, were serious readers of the Bible. Tevi
Troy, writing in The Wall Street Journal on February 14, noted that “Our
earliest presidents, George Washington, John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, and James
Madison were all assiduous readers—of history and philosophy, and the Bible as
well. Lacking many books in his earliest years, Abraham Lincoln “was among the
most diligent readers of all U.S. Presidents.
I suspect
that the Obama administration’s open attacks on the Catholic Church for its
resistance to Obamacare’s demands that contraceptive medications be covered in
healthcare insurance plans makes a lot of Americans, not just Catholics, uneasy
at best, raising serious questions about the nation’s fundamental devotion to
the free practice of religion.
In a
statement about the National Day of Prayer, President Obama made no reference
to Christianity, but acknowledged freedom of religion in its historic context.
He is a far cry from his predecessor, George W. Bush, for whom his faith in
Jesus was openly acknowledged and who found wide support in the nation’s
evangelical community. Bush was an avid reader of the Bible.
A Marxist
at heart, I doubt that Obama cares much for Christianity and his Chicago church
was led by Jeremiah Wright who is most famous for having said “God damn
America” and had to apologize for remarks critical of Jews. Obama has openly defended
Islam and many believe he is a Muslim.
Hollywood
is rediscovering the Bible these days after years of films based on cartoon
characters like Batman and Spider Man. In 2014 it will release more big
Biblically-based films than it has in the last eleven years combined and the
trend is strong for more in 2015.
Debuting
in February was “Son of God” from Twentieth Century Fox, culled from the
History Channel’s 2013 miniseries, “The Bible”, produced by Mark Burnett who,
along with his wife, Roma Downey, is a devout Christian. Debuting in March is
“Noah” from Paramount, starring Russell Crow and coming in April is “Heaven is
for Real.” On its way to the nation’s theatres are “Mary” and “Exodus.”
Burnett
believes that people are seeking messages of spiritual uplift in the wake of
the 2008 financial crash and I would add the five years of Obama’s failed
management of the economy with its emphasis on socialist, Keynesian government
spending that has proved to be largely a waste that has added six trillion to
the nation’s soaring debt.
Having
attended school when the day began with a pledge of allegiance and the reading
of a prayer, I am among those who lament the court-imposed ban on the latter.
As a longtime book reviewer, I have seen a trend of books espousing atheism.
Among the latest I have received are “Writing God’s Obituary: How a Good
Methodist Became a Better Atheist” by Anthony B. Pinn, “The Original Atheists”
edited by S.T. Joshi, and “The Transcendental Temptation: A Critique of
Religion and the Paranormal” by Paul Kurtz, one of the most active critics of
religion with fifty books to his credit. There are, however, many books that
explore faith such as “Faith Afield: A Sportsman’s Devotional” by Steve Scott
and “”What on Earth Do We Know About Heaven?” by Randal Rauser.
One can
only hope that Hollywood’s rediscovery of the Bible will contribute to a
resistance against those groups and individuals who protest any display of
religious symbols such as the Cross, notable during the Christmas holidays.
America
was founded by men who were believers in religious expression and faith. And
tolerance. The drift from these values harm the nation and a renewal of them are
the essence of hope.
© Alan Caruba,
2014
The traditional joke told in many college philosophy classes tells it all: a professor writes on the chalk board at the end of his class in big bold capital letters underlined..
ReplyDelete"GOD IS DEAD" - Nietzsche
The class is dismissed, the lights turned off and the door locked by the professor who has the only key to the door.
The next morning, the professor unlocks the door, turns on the light and looks at the chalk board and written by an unknown hand in bold, underlined capital letters...
"Nietzsche is dead" - God
Hollywood rediscovering the Bible kind of creeps me out... End of days creeps me out... Of course I believe this *end of days* stuff about as much as I do GloBull warming experts...
ReplyDeleteHollywood is just like a duplicitous Democrat come election time, they will say ANYTHING they think will get votes and ANYTHING it takes to have a $25/$30 MILLION opening weekend..
I know why guys like us aren't politicians and movie producers too Alan... We can BS a little, and have fun with it, but to be a Pol or a Producer you have to be able to LIE, stab people in the back, screw your neighbor and give a convincing speech... ALL at the same time.. I just can't multi-task like that...