It's been a long, long time since I picked up paper and pencil (yes, I still use paper and pencil) with joy in my heart. Thank you, Saint Paul's, for giving me a forum to express myself, and thank you, friends and family, for never giving up on me. Finally, thank you to my wonderful wife, Erin, for loving me unconditionally, always encouraging me to try writing again - and for helping this technologically challenged man actually start his own blog!!
My next work is already in progress. I read Stephen King's The Green Mile a few years ago, and I remembered being struck by its Biblical themes then. As I began this journey a few weeks ago with the writing of The Real Man of Steel, I couldn't stop thinking about the lives of John Coffey and Paul Edgecombe in Cold Mountain so many years ago. I feel called to explore the story of Jesus through the lives of these characters so that we all might better understand Jesus, and in turn, ourselves.
I hope that you will all enjoy reading these articles as much as I will enjoy writing them. I look forward to reading your posts about my work, and hope that you will leave many suggestions of other novels, short stories, movies, and theatrical works that I can explore in more depth so that we may all see Jesus's teachings between the lines.
Seeing Jesus Between the Lines
This blog is dedicated to exploring Biblical themes seen in novels, movies, short stories and theatrical works.
Saturday, July 27, 2013
The Real Man of Steel
Jesus
has a way of sneaking up on you sometimes.
For instance, in the newest Superman movie, The Man of Steel, Clark
Kent must decide if he is willing to surrender himself to General Zod and save
humanity from certain annihilation. But Clark
doesn’t trust the villainous General Zod any more than the humans he has hidden
from his entire life. Jonathan Kent, his
human father, warned Clark the boy that people were not yet ready to accept someone
with his abilities. Jonathan also taught
Clark that his powers would someday change the world and when that time came he
would have to decide whether it would be for good or for evil. So Clark, unsure of what to do and unable to
rely on his dad’s advice any more, goes to church and talks to a priest. As they talk, Clark sits before a stained
glass window depicting Jesus wearing something reminiscent of a red cape. The priest advises Clark to trust his gut, and
in the next scene, we see a 33-year-old Superman willingly surrender to the
human authorities. Led in chains he
could easily overcome, Superman is presented to General Zod, whose armor and
haircut are so suggestive of ancient Roman styles that the viewer no longer
wonders whom Superman allegorically represents.
The Man
of Steel is a reflection of the Son of Man, Jesus Christ. The scene above reminds us of Jesus’s
struggles in the Garden of Gethsemane. We
see several instances in the Gospels of Jesus asking those he helps to refrain
from telling others about what he did for them, presumably to keep his fame
from spreading. But in the Garden, he wrestles
with the decision to enter Jerusalem and expose his true identity, risking
death to save the world. Ultimately, we
learn that Jesus overcomes his fear and willingly surrenders himself to the
Jewish authorities, and in turn, Pontius Pilate. But if Superman does represent Jesus, then what are we to learn about Jesus from The Man of Steel?
The
film explores Clark Kent’s childhood more than any other movie before it. Through several flashbacks, we see young
Clark struggling with his powers. We are
filled with compassion as a terrified Clark realizes he can see beneath the
skins of people around him; we cry with the boy as he is brought to his knees
from the painfully amplified sounds in his environment; finally, we feel
helpless rage for this little boy who, because he knows of the damage his
legendary strength can cause, refuses to fight back as his peers mercilessly
bully him. We know these powers will be
great assets to the adult Superman, but to a young Clark Kent, they are nothing
short of a curse. Yet, in each of these
scenes we see Clark overcome these obstacles by relying on his father’s wisdom,
life lessons the adult Clark Kent still follows. He learns to focus his mind so as not to be
overwhelmed by his superhuman hearing and sight; he moves from town to town, so
that word of his life saving deeds do not follow him; he chooses to walk away
from a fight with a belligerent drunk in a bar; and finally, in surrendering to
Zod, he demonstrates the last lesson his father taught him – the willingness to
die so that others might live. Thus,
Clark Kent becomes Superman in part because Jonathan Kent was his earthly father.
Have you
ever considered how little we know about Joseph, and his role in Jesus’s
upbringing? What could Jonathan Kent
teach us about Joseph? We talk about the
importance of Mary, and rightly so, but we forget that Joseph was also chosen
to raise Jesus into the man God needed him to be. Although we know very little about Jesus’s
childhood, it is likely that he also struggled with fear as he began to
recognize the differences between himself and others. He, too, had to learn how to control his
powers, to forgive, and to find the courage to accept his destiny. But who taught Jesus this? The creators of The Man of Steel help
us see the role that Joseph played in Jesus’s development through the life of
Jonathan Kent. They, like so many
fathers before and after them, were certainly role models for their
extraordinary sons. Jesus became the Jesus
we know today due to the role Joseph played in his life.
So
who is the real Man of Steel? It is
Jesus, the Son of Man, who chose to defeat the world’s sin, and even death, to
save us from ourselves. Jesus, just like
Superman, found that courage from his earthly father’s example. And that lesson is one every father should
remember.
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