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Loyd Ericson
Philosophical Interpretations of Paul
Ingolf Dalferth
Final Paper
May 2, 2011
Christianity‟s Perversion:
Zizek and Latin American Liberation Theology
The next to final scene in Mel Gibson‟s Braveheart features several minutes of the
protagonist, William Wallace (played by Mel Gibson), being beaten, choked, racked, castrated,
disemboweled, and finally beheaded in front of a cheering fourteenth-century English crowd.
Taken by itself, the scene would be akin to a snuff film or contemporary horror “torture-porn”
(like Eli Roth‟s Hostel). Instead, however, it evokes a powerful reaction from the viewer because
of the context in which Wallace‟s torture and death is given in the movie. For nearly three hours
before this violent presentation we are shown the exploits of Wallace as he rallies the peasants of
Scotland together to fight against England‟s King Edward in an attempt to gain their freedom.
Fearing Wallace as a threat to his power, Edward sees that he is eventually captured and
sentenced to death. With this long background, the climactic scene is not just difficult to watch
because of its violence, but because of that which led up to these final moments. His death points
to his life and is presented as a testimony to his cause.
In The Puppet and the Dwarf: The Perverse Core of Christianity, Slavoj Zizek concludes
that the “perverse core” of Christianity is the message that Christianity is the “religion of
atheism” wherein when “Christ dies, what dies with him is the . . . hope that there is a father.”1
Though they would hardly consider themselves advocates of a religion of atheism, liberation
theologians from Latin America2 have made similar departures from the traditional
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understandings of the cross,3 sharing with Zizek the view that “in theological terms, . . . it is not
we, humans, who can rely on the help of God—on the contrary, we must help God.”4 In this
paper I hope to compare and contrast the departures of Zizek and Latin American liberation
theologies as they both contrast themselves from the more traditional theology of the cross—a
contrast that is particularly evident in a comparison of Braveheart with Mel Gibson‟s other
blockbuster, The Passion of the Christ.
That Wallace in Braveheart is portrayed as a Christ-figure is abundantly evident
throughout the film—both are betrayed by their own (Wallace by the Scottish nobles and his
disciple, Robert the Bruce; Jesus by the Jewish elite and his disciple, Judas), both are sentenced
to death by representatives of the British or Roman empires, both are carried on crosses (Wallace
before his torture, and Jesus following his torture), both are executed before taunting masses and
solemn disciples, and, although Wallace rides into town on a horse before his betrayal, the sound
of a donkey braying is added to the scene, evoking the imagery of Christ riding into Jerusalem on
both a colt and an ass. And yet the Real of the torture and deaths of the protagonists in both
Braveheart and The Passion are strikingly different. According to Zizek,
It was God Himself who made a Pascalian wager: by dying on the Cross, He made a risky
gesture with no guaranteed final outcome. . . . Far from providing the conclusive dot on
the I, the divine act stands, rather, for the openness of a New Beginning, and it is up to
humanity to live up to it, to decide its meaning, to make something of it. . . . [T]he Event
is a pure-empty sign, and we have to work to generate its meaning.5
In both the Middle Ages of England and (what became) the meridian of time of Jerusalem,
execution by the government was a common affair—even entertainment (wherein today we go to
the theatres to watch these executions reenacted on screen). How, then, were the deaths of
Christ-Wallace and Christ-Jesus any different—or, how did they get their meaning?
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As Zizek points out, the real meaning of their deaths, or what is posited as the Real, “is
not external to the Symbolic [their torture and death]: the Real is the Symbolic itself. . . . [T]o
step into the Real does not entail abandoning language, throwing oneself into the abyss of the
chaotic Real, but, on the contrary, dropping the very allusion to some external point of reference
which eludes the Symbolic.”6 In other words, the meaning of the symbol, the Real, must be
understood in and through the terms of the symbol itself—instead of projecting its real meaning
outside of the symbolic and even outside of language, to some ineffable, unreachable Real.
This, however, does not mean that the Real is self-evident, or that the symbolic carries or
shows its meaning by itself. After describing two identical maps of a tribal village drawn by both
some of the elites who live in the area more central to the temple and the less individuals who are
pushed to the outskirts of town, Zizek points out that while the two maps may be identical, what
those maps mean and symbolize can be very different. While one group may see an equally
dispersed layout, the other may see an invisible, but present, line delineating the elites of the
village from the rest. He writes,
It is here that we can see in what precise sense the Real intervenes through
anamorphosis. First we have the “actual,” “objective” arrangement of the houses, and
then its two different symbolizations that both distort, in an anamorphic way, the actual
arrangement. The “Real” here, however, is not the actual arrangement, but the traumatic
core of the social antagonism that distorts the tribe members‟ view of the actual
antagonism.7
He further adds that “the „truth‟ is not the „real‟ state of things, that is, the „direct‟ view of the
object without perspectival distortion, but the very Real of the antagonism that causes
perspectival distortion. . . .” In other words, the truth of the Real is not a hard objective kernel
that we attain by peeling away subjective perspective. Instead it is the truth of the reality of those
perspectives. As with Wallace‟s death, the truth is not the facts of his torture and death, but
rather, the truth is the experience of his torture and death through the eyes of his disciples who
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have participated in his revolutionary battles with him. Zizek continues, “There is a truth;
everything is not relative—but this truth is the truth of the perspectival distortion as such, not the
truth distorted by the partial view from a one-sided perspective.”8 Again, for Wallace‟s disciples,
there was one truth of his death—the truth of his revolutionary cause—not a series of truths, each
gained from differing perspectives of his death. For the disciples, the one truth denied all others.
So what then of the cross? For both Latin American liberation theology and the
traditional theology of the cross there are also truths of perspectival distortions that reveal the
Real symbolized in the cross. For the liberation theologian, this distortion is seen in what
Gustavo Gutierrez has termed, the “preferential option for the poor.”9 Growing out of the mid-
twentieth century, liberation theology arose as a result of theologians in Latin America, primarily
Catholic, asking what it is that Christ and Christianity had to do with the gross systemic poverty
and injustice plaguing their countries. As Roberto Oliveros writes,
As we turn to the world of the Latin American popular masses and open our eyes to see
those masses, we find ourselves face to face with the results of centuries of
institutionalized injustice. Millions upon millions of persons are subjected to an inhuman,
demeaning poverty. We run up against this unjust poverty with every step we take, and
the collision deeply shakes the hearts of Christians of goodwill. . . .
What seminal experience and intuition has given the rise to the theology of
liberation? Purely and simply, the daily experience of the unjust poverty in which
millions of our fellow Latin Americans are obliged to live. In and from this experience
emerges the shattering word of the God of Moses and of Jesus: this situation is not the
will of that God.10
Taking literally Jesus‟s announcement that he is the anointed one to “bring good news to the
poor, . . . to proclaim release to the captives . . . , [and] to let the oppressed go free” (Luke 4:18),
liberation theology contends that the gross reality of poverty and oppression requires that we
understand the Christian message through a hermeneutic or perspectival distortion of relieving
the poor. This means that all aspects of Christ, the Gospel, and Christianity need to be
understood through this perspective in terms of how it addresses the plight of the poor—
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including Jesus‟s life, the Cross, and resurrection, soteriology, ecclesiology, evangelization,
scripture, sacraments, and community.
Thus, through this distortion to understand the meaning of the cross—the Real of Jesus‟s
suffering and death—one must understand the cross in terms of Jesus‟s work for the poor. As
mentioned earlier, the meaning that Wallace‟s torture and death for his disciples at the end of
Braveheart was not in the violence itself—the object without perspectival distortion—but must
be understood in terms of the revolutionary life that led to his death. In similar terms, Ignacio
Ellacuría argues that the meaning of the cross must be understood in terms of the life that led to
Jesus‟s death. According to him, the question “„Why did Jesus die‟ is inseparable from the
[question] „why did they kill him.‟”11
To this latter question he answers that Jesus “is killed . . .
because of the historic life he led, a life of deeds and words that those who represented and held
the reins of the religious, socioeconomic, and political situation could not tolerate.”12
Like the Christ of Ellacuría‟s liberation theology, Wallace upset the social order and
made his death nearly inevitable. By rejecting the offers to join with the Scottish nobles, he made
enemies with both the English royalty and the Scottish nobility, and frustrated the latter‟s plan to
insert their own oppressive reign and control over the poor under the guise of mitigating the
English rule. Though Wallace‟s death did not happen out of logical necessity (he could have
chosen to join with the nobles, or not fight at all), by earning the threats from both the English
and Scottish elites Wallace made their conjoined efforts against him unavoidable.
It is this inevitability of death by the hands of the oppressors that Ellacuría calls the
historic necessity of Christ‟s death. According to Ellacuría, “We may admit that the death of
Jesus and the crucifixion of the people are necessary, but only if we speak of a necessity in
history and not a merely natural necessity.”13
Christ‟s death by natural necessity would mean that
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the world was such that his death by the hands of the rulers would have occurred by some sort of
causal law. This, Ellacuría argues, “would entail both eliminating the responsibility of those who
kill prophets and those who crucify humankind, thereby veiling the aspect of sin in historic
evil.”14
Rather than appealing to some sort of abstract evil that inevitably acts in the world, for
Ellacuría, Jesus‟s death was a historic necessity that resulted from his free acts in a world where
historic persons also acted: “Necessity in history, on the other hand forces us to emphasize the
determining causes of what happens.”15
Just as Wallace‟s fight against the English oppressors
and his rejection of the Scottish nobility would result in his death, for Jesus the “resistance of the
oppressive powers and the struggle for liberation in history brought [him] persecution and
death.”16
For Ellacuría, a historic necessity of Jesus‟s death can only be seen “after the fact.
Neither his disciples nor he himself saw in the beginning and not through the reflection on
scripture, that the proclamation and victory of the Reign had to go by way of death.”17
This view
of the present as free but the past as historically necessary in retrospect is what Zizek calls “the
existentialist “common place,” which he argues must be inverted:
One should thus invert the existentialist commonplace according to which, when
we are engaged in a present historical process, we perceive it as full of possibilities, and
ourselves as agents free to choose among them; while, to a retrospective view, the same
process appears as fully determined and necessary, with no room for alternatives: on the
contrary, it is the engaged agents who perceive themselves as caught in a Destiny, merely
reacting to it, while, retrospectively, from the standpoint of later observation, we can
discern alternatives in the past, possibilities of events taking a different path.
Perhaps this inverse of Ellacuría is evident in Javier Jiménez Limón‟s claim that “martyrdom is
an important reality. . . . People are not being killed through hatred of the faith.” Instead, the
world “kills those who try to make the faith genuine, by truly following Jesus Christ, in
transforming solidarity with the poor, by prophetic unmasking of oppression and idolatry.”18
In
this sense, death for acting out on behalf of the poor is an inevitable result of true Christian faith,
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an avoidable destiny for some who try to follow Jesus—a sentiment that was clearly felt when
Ellacuría and five of his associates were gunned down in their church by the Salvadoran military.
On the other hand, in retrospect it is easy to see how this historic necessity could have been
avoided, to see how free we really are—after all, if Ellacuría had chosen the life of a priest only
concerned with transcendent sin, then he could easily be alive today. And in retrospect, Jesus
could have easily avoided the cross if he had chosen to live another type of life (this is, of course,
the plot of Martin Scorsese‟s Last Temptation of Christ, where Jesus sees what his life would
have been like if he had gotten married and started a family instead of living the life that led to
the cross).
Against liberation theology‟s perspective of the cross as signifying the life of Jesus, is the
one depicted in The Passion. Like Gibson‟s other movie, we are again treated (entertained?) by a
depiction of the protagonist—Jesus, this time played by Jim Caviezel—being mocked, beaten,
whipped, choked, nailed, pierced, and dying from exhaustion on a cross before a Roman and
Jewish crowd. However, unlike Braveheart, where Wallace‟s torture and death comprises of
only a short scene at end of the extended portrayal of his life, Jesus‟s torture and death is the
content of the entire film—leaving one critic to call it “a two-hour-and-six-minute snuff movie—
The Jesus Chainsaw Massacre.”19
In fact, beyond a few short flashbacks depicting brief scenes
of Jesus‟s life, such as him playfully interacting with his mother, forgiving the prostitute, and
teaching his disciples at the Last Supper, nothing is shown concerning Jesus‟s life to give the
viewer any understanding as to why the Roman and Jewish elites would want to inflict such
violence on him.
To be fair to Gibson, his depiction of Jesus‟s death seems to be exemplary of many
Christians‟ perspective of the cross—where Jesus, as a happy, hippie-like dispenser of kindness
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and transcendent aphorisms, is beaten and killed for just being too kind. Reflecting on the
perplexing notion of the Roman Empire and Jewish elites‟ concern and effort to kill such a
hippie-Jesus, Ellacuría‟s friend, Jon Sobrino, writes,
Persons who preach an exclusively transcendent Reign [Kingdom] of God do not get
themselves murdered. People who preach a Reign that is only a new relationship with
God, or only “love,” or only “reconciliation,” or only “trust in God,” are not murdered.
All these things may be legitimately regarded as elements accompanying the message of
the Reign of God, but they alone do not explain Jesus‟ death, and therefore they alone
cannot be the central element of the Reign. The Reign of God must have had some
bearing on the historico-social, not only the transcendent.20
According to Ellacuría and Sobrino, God as Jesus did not come to earth simply to be hung on the
cross to absolve persons of some sort of transcendent or metaphysical sin with a transcendent or
metaphysical grace. Rather than coming to earth to die, God came to earth to live a life that both
confronted sin and taught his followers to do the same. By this, the cross is not a symbol of
violent sacrificial death for the sake of sacrifice. Instead, to them the cross is signified in the
question “why did they kill him?” It is when we ask this question that we come to realize that
Jesus was not capitally punished for simply teaching of love and transcendence, but he was
rather murdered for confronting oppressive systems and trying to liberate the oppressed from
their suffering. The value of the cross is that it symbolizes, points to, and embodies the life that
Jesus of Nazareth lived. Thus, Jesus was not only the transcendent God made immanent, but in
his imminence, he did that which either the transcendent God could not—or would not—do.
Opening his book, Zizek ask, “What if eternity is a sterile, impotent lifeless domain of
pure potentialities, which, in order fully to actualize itself, has to pass through temporal
existence? What if God‟s descent to man, far from being an act of grace toward humanity, is the
only way for God to gain full actuality, and to liberate Himself from the suffocating constraints
of Eternity?”21
In other words, if to truly be free is to be able to affect material reality (as all
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humans can do), and if to be truly transcendent is to be wholly apart from material existence (and
thus unable to touch and affect the material world), then in order for God to truly be free he had
to dispose of his transcendence. Thus, Zizek writes, “true love is precisely the . . . forsaking of
eternity for an imperfect individual.”22
For Ellacuría, the type of life that led to Christ‟s death was a life of what he calls
“historic soteriology.” This is a life that “seeks human promotion or human rights from the side
of the oppressed, on their behalf, and in struggle against the side of the oppressors. In other
words, his action is historical and concrete and goes to the roots of the oppression.”23
Like
Wallace, who was fighting with the oppressed Scots to gain their freedom from their oppressors,
Ellacuría‟s Jesus is foremost concerned with the historical and tangible suffering of the
oppressed. It is they who are in direct and urgent need of salvation from their pains. Just as
Yahweh in the Hebrew Bible was concerned with the historical and concrete enslavement and
imprisonment of the Israelites, so too is Jesus foremost concerned with the historical oppression
of others. To attempt to spiritualize their historical nature is to strip them of their importance.
Ellacuría writes,
It would be a mutilation of the Hebrew scriptures to try to take from them only
their religious spirit without their historical flesh; and to try to keep the spirit of the
Christian scriptures without their historicity, or to use their sense of historicity only to
support their spirit. In both testaments spirit and flesh, God and history, are so
inseparably tied that the disappearance of one would disfigure or even destroy, the
other.24
And just as salvation must remain historical, so must the sin which salvation is directed upon. It
also “cannot be studied abstractly” for it is also “concretely present in subtle forms that require
more careful theological analysis.”25
Thus Ellacuría writes that “We must ask in all seriousness what the sin of the world is
today, or in what forms the sin of the world appears today.” And to this he answers that “the sin
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of the world is sharply expressed today in what must be called unjust poverty.”26
In other words,
sin is not some transcendent Real or opposing Other that lies behind poverty and oppression, but
is encountered through the very mask or material experience of such injustice. As Zizek puts it,
such recognition is “to become aware that there is no mystery, no hidden true content, behind the
mask (deceptive surface) of the Other.”27
This is the same today as it was in the New Testament
where “the poor themselves, impoverished and oppressed by injustice, have become the
preferred locus of benevolence and grace, of God's faithful love.”28
It is in this manner that the
depiction of Wallace exemplifies how the historical sin of poverty and oppression and the
historical salvific acts of seeking liberation are essential to Ellacuría‟s discussion of Christ, in
that both Wallace and Jesus were not concerned with fighting some ultimate sin that existed
beyond oppression, but in the oppression itself.
On the other hand, the state of the poor and oppressed and their need for historic
salvation play no role whatsoever in The Passion. Instead of symbolizing and giving truth to the
plight of the poor and the revolutionary spirit, this latter movie instead portrays Jesus‟s torture
and death as the means by which transcendent sin is overcome. Whereas Braveheart begins with
a depiction of King Edward‟s ruthless oppression over the Scots, The Passion opens with Jesus
being confronted by the androgynous Satan, taunting him: “No man can carry this burden, I tell
you. It is far too heavy. Saving their souls is too costly.”29
The implication here is that by being
tortured and killed, Jesus will overcome transcendent sin. This sin is not the material, historical
sin of poverty and oppression, but is rather the wholly other transcendent remnant of sin—a
formless sticky residue that is beyond. Like Satan, whose own gender can‟t be pinned down, this
sin, also, lies behind all of its material variations.
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Thus to subdue this transcendent sin and bring about peace, Jesus is offered as a violent
sacrifice to bring about peace, the message being that true peace is achieved through true
violence. “The ultimate fake of Christianity,” Zizek writes,
is that it sustains its official message of inner peace and redemption by a morbid
excitation, namely, a fixation on the suffering, mutilated corpse of Christ. The very term
passion here is revealing—as if the only thing that can arouse passion is the sick
spectacle of passive suffering.30
The emphasis on the peace through violence is made quite explicit in The Passion. In an
interview about the film Gibson said, “I don‟t think other films have tapped into the real force of
this story. I mean, have you seen any of the others? They are either inaccurate in their history, or
they suffer from bad music or bad hair. This film will show the passion of Jesus Christ just the
way it happened.” He adds, “There is no gratuitous violence in this film. I don‟t think anyone
under 12 should go see it—unless they‟re a very mature 12-year-old. It‟s pretty heavy. I think we
have gotten too used to seeing pretty crucifixes on the wall and we forget what really happened. I
mean, we know that Jesus was scourged, that he carried his cross, that he had nails put through
his hands and feet, but we rarely think about what this means.”31
The “real force,” of course is
the grotesqueness in which Jesus‟s suffering has been betrayed. And as Gibson implies, the
passion can only be truly meaningful if it is as violent as possible—other depictions fail in that
they don‟t show enough blood, mutilated flesh, dislocated limbs, and severed eyeballs. The
absurdity and gratuitous nature of Gibson‟s depiction of Christ‟s passion is evident, however,
when one compares the treatment of the other two crucified persons as they remain rather
unscathed as they carry only cross bars to Calvary—compared to Jesus who, already bloodied
and beaten, is continually whipped and hit as he carries the entire heavier cross. (Ironically, in
the director‟s commentary accompanying the DVD release of Braveheart, Gibson notes that
Wallace‟s torture and execution scene was toned down because they felt it was too violent).
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Midway through The Passion, Pilate (who is portrayed as an almost moral person—in
that he is willing to command Jesus‟s brutal torture to almost death, but does not want to actually
command Jesus to death) has a conversation with his wife in which he asks: “What is truth,
Claudia?. . . Do you want to know what my truth is, Claudia? If I don't condemn this man, I
know Caiphas will start a rebellion. If I do condemn him, then his followers may. Either way,
there will be bloodshed. Caesar has warned me, Claudia. Warned me twice. He swore that the
next time the blood would be mine. That is my truth!” Like with Gibson, the truth for Pilate is
also violence—either I inflict violence on Jesus or Caesar (Rome‟s “Son of God”) will inflict
violence on me. And like the Christian veneration of the violence of the passion, Pilate idolizes
violence as the one true truth.
And while Gibson and Pilate (and much of Christianity) may venerate the idol of
violence, according to Zizek there is a deeper idolization underlying the Christian passion: “the
ultimate idolatry is not the idolizing of the mask of the image, itself, but the belief that there is
some hidden positive content beyond the mask.”32
With this in mind, what greater idolatry is
there than the belief that there is a transcendent sin—the androgynous Satan—that even God
must appease. Is not this the message of The Passion: that not even God could overcome (simply
forgive) the demands of the transcendent sin, but had to instead offer himself up as a sacrifice to
meet its demands. After all, if an enemy, stranger, or friend sin against me—even committing the
most violent, vile, and betraying acts—it is within my power to forgive that person. However,
with this transcendent sin, rather than sin succumbing to the demands of God, it is God who must
succumb to the demands of sin. It is not God that is omnipotent, but rather sin that wears this
crown. Sin/Satan determines how the game is played: either humanity or God‟s son must suffer.
And thus, while Jesus‟s death is followed with Satan‟s scream of disappointment (or is it a
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scream of victory?) it is God‟s failure to beat Satan (his impotence) that is made manifest in the
single tear dropping from heaven at the moment of His son‟s death.
If one is going to say that God has beaten Satan, it is not in overpowering Satan, but in
tricking Satan into believing that s/he is getting the better deal. Concerning sacrifice, Zizek
writes, “one sacrifices not in order to get something from the Other, but in order to dupe the
Other, in order to convince him or it that one is still missing something, that is, jouissance.”33
In
this sense, Satan‟s cry at the end of the movie is a burst of frustration in realizing that s/he had
been conned by God (or rather, was taken in by God‟s marketing skills). While Satan wished for
humanity, God flirted before Satan what s/he did not already have: the pleasure of watching
God‟s Son suffer with the hope of Him giving in. Just as with God‟s earlier Old Testament bet
with Satan over Job, the terms are the same: despite the vast amount of evil that can be afflicted,
the chosen servant/Son will stay true to the transcendent divine Other and not give way to the
transcendent sinful Other. That Satan finds pleasure in Jesus‟s suffering is made clear in The
Passion, as Satan is repeatedly shown in the background watching the violent scenes with his/her
own passionate pleasure.
Seeing that God is incapable of simply overcoming the transcendent sin, the Christian
viewer is asked to join in God‟s con against Satan. In doing so, the Christian believer implicitly
says: “Yes. Inflict whatever violence and pain upon Jesus, for he will not curse God‟s face. After
all, better He than me.” And thus, the believer takes in a hidden pleasure in watching Jesus
suffer. There is a love and passion for his suffering as this suffering absolves the believer from
all of his past, present, and future sins. The violence on Christ enables the believer to ultimately
be untouched by the residual transcendent sin—despite the historical material sin that they may
live in and actively support daily. According to Zizek,
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far from being the religion of sacrifice, of the renunciation of earthly pleasures . . . ,
Christianity offers a devious stratagem for indulging our desires without having to pay
the price for them, for enjoying life without the fear of decay and debilitating pain
awaiting us at the end of the day. If we go to the limits in this direction, it would even be
possible to maintain that this is the ultimate message of Christ‟s sacrifice: you can
indulge in your desires, and enjoy; I took the price for it upon myself!
While many Christians would certainly balk at this—what Zizek calls “the perverse functioning
of Christianity”—it is nevertheless the argument given against governmental welfare by many
among the conservative Christian right (the intended audience of The Passion): that the welfare
system removes accountability and incentivizes persons to be lazy and not work.
In an episode of Mr. Deity (an online series of short comedies depicting God creating the
universe and implementing his plans), a meeting between God and Jesus is portrayed where God
offers Jesus the opportunity to suffer and die for everyone‟s sins. After receiving trite answers to
the immediate problems that he sees in God‟s plan (“Why can‟t you just forgive them?” “If the
rest of the people aren‟t half-God, how is it fair for them to have the same expectations to not
sin?” etc), Jesus nods his head: “I see. I finally understand… Haha. This is a good one… I‟m
being PUNKED! Where are the cameras? You can all come out now!”34
The question, of course,
that this begs us to ask is that if it is not Satan in The Passion that is being punked—or conned—
but actually Jesus who is it at the butt of the scheme. In response to Jesus‟s question, “Why is it
that you can‟t just forgive people?” Mr. Deity replies, “Well it‟s just that sin thing.” If
transcendent sin is the hidden idol behind the mask of material sin, and if Jesus‟s torture and
death is to appease that sin, then the joke is that Christians are sacrificing their God to a false
idol.
For Zizek, this joke is the perverse core of Christianity: that when Jesus was on the cross
and wondering if God had abandoned him, the reality was that God, as the omnipotent
transcendent Other, was never there to begin with:
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Christ‟s “Father, why has thou forsaken me?” is not a complaint to the omnipotent
capricious God-Father whose ways are indecipherable to us, mortal humans, but a
complaint that hints at an impotent God: it is rather like a child who, having believed in
his father‟s powerfulness, discovers with horror that his father cannot help him. . . . In
short, . . . it is God-the-Father who, in effect, dies, revealing His utter impotence.35
With this, Jesus‟s death on the cross was not a meaningful exchange between a transcendent
ineffable God and transcendent ineffable sin. Comparing Jesus‟s suffering to that of Job‟s, Zizek
argues that the revelation on God in the account of Job‟s tribulation is one of silence. When Job
is at the ends of despair and wishing that he had never been born, God can only boast of his own
strength. He offers nothing to provide Job with a meaning to his suffering. Zizek writes, “So
what we get is neither the good God letting Job know that his suffering was just an ordeal
destined to test his faith, nor a dark God beyond the Law, . . . but rather a God who acts like
someone caught in a moment of impotence . . . and tries to escape His predicament by empty
boasting.”36
Thus, this impotence of God is also the great revelation of the cross—not that Jesus is
God, but rather that God (Jesus) is man. According to Zizek, “This final reversal by means of
which the founding Exception (God) falls into His own creation . . . is what is unique to
Christianity, the mystery of incarnation, of God (not only appearing as a man, but) becoming a
man.”37
Far from showing us that God is the omnipotent divine transcendent Other who, by
becoming like man, was able to conquer the sinful transcendent Other, Jesus shows us that God
is incapable of saving humanity from the violence of the world (historic sin)—and is even a
victim of it.
That God is impotent and unable to save humans from historic sin drives theologians to
defend God through theodicies which, again, point to varying transcendent realities. One can
imagine a kidnapped teen who, while being raped and tortured by her predator, calls out to God
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and asks: “Why me? Why is this happening to me?” (“Why hast thou forsaken me?”) In answer
to her prayers, a philosopher of religion comes to her and answers: “God is allowing your
suffering because he doesn‟t want to interfere with this man‟s free-will. While your pain is great,
it is much more important that this man is able to do as he chooses.” Or perhaps the philosopher
of religion tells her: “You are suffering unbearable pain. God certainly has the power to help
you, but there is a greater good or some soul-making value that your pain and suffering is going
to make possible for someone else.” Or perhaps, “This is terrible, but it‟ll all be better in
heaven.” Or perhaps, he puts it simply: “If you saw the big picture—God‟s eternal plan— you
would realize that you are merely one of millions that God has allowed to suffer for his ultimate
goal. It is all for good.” Here the real, historic, suffering is countered with transcendent ideals
and ineffable justifications: freedom, experience, the eschaton, and God‟s invisible plan. Because
God‟s impotence prevents Him from compensating our temporal suffering with temporal
sustenance, it must instead be a compensation of the wholly Other. It is for this reason that Zizek
writes, “The real task is not to get compensation from those responsible, but to deprive them of
the position that makes them responsible. Instead of asking compensation from God . . . , we
should ask the question: do we really need God?”38
Instead of our asking the omnipotent God for help, it is the impotent God that must ask
help from us. “What this means in theological terms, is that it is not we, humans, who can rely on
the help of God—on the contrary, we must help God.”39
For Zizek, God needs help because he,
as it has been revealed by the cross, is nothing: “So what is revealed in Christianity is not just the
entire content, but, more specifically, that there is nothing—no secret—behind it to be
revealed.”40
Because there is nothing, no omnipotent Other to rely on, it is instead on humans to
rise to the occasion.
17
In Braveheart, just before his betrayal and death, Wallace begins to take on a godlike
status as rumors and legends about him spread throughout Scotland. His torture and death
revealed exactly what the British wanted to reveal—that behind the rumors and legends was
nothing. However, while his death may have revealed the void behind his legendary status, it
also revealed the revolutionary spirit that drove his labors. Contrasting against Jesus‟s final
words, “It is accomplished. Father, into your hands I commend my spirit,” is Wallace‟s cry of
“Freedom!”—his revolutionary spirit, as it were, not sent to God but to his fellow Scots. This last
word performs two functions. First, it denies the false and oppressive sovereignty of the English
rule. The magistrate governing over his torture and execution expects Wallace to plea for
mercy—a plea which would falsely acknowledge the English power as a source for salvation
from suffering—and Wallace‟s shout denies their desire. (Further contrasting The Passion,
where it is Jesus‟s death that brings about mercy, during Wallace‟s torture it is the crowds‟ call
for mercy which ultimately brings about Wallace‟s death.) Second, and more importantly, far
from announcing any accomplishment or end goal, this shout points back to his life of fighting
for the salvation and liberation of the oppressed, and points forward to the work that is yet to be
done.
It is this last point—that his death marks a continuation of the work—that is made
explicit in the final moments of the film. Although there is no physical bodily resurrection, a
narrated voice-over describes that, while Wallace was dismembered and his limbs were
displayed as a warning to others, “It did not have the effect that [the English] planned.” The final
scene of the movie shows Wallace‟s Scottish followers armed for battle against the English.
Robert the Bruce, the Scottish noble who had previously betrayed Wallace, stands with them
holding a cloth that symbolized Wallace‟s historic push for the salvation of the oppressed
18
Scottish. Addressing his fellow Scots he asks, “You have bled with Wallace. Now bleed with
me,” and with that the Scots rush the English to fight for their freedom.
According to Ellacuría, “Jesus‟s death is inseparately connected to the eschatological and
historical coming of the Reign [Kingdom of God], and for that purpose the resurrection means
not only a verification or consolation, but the assurance that this work must continue and that He
remains alive to continue it.”41
Unlike Braveheart which depicts the resurrection of Wallace as a
continuation of the reality of oppression and the work of those who are trying to liberate the
oppressed, The Passion ends with a final scene that solely depicts the resurrection as a physical
bodily resurrection, where, besides the nail prints, his naked body is perfect—including his
trimmed beard and brushed hair. Along with the shrill of Satan which followed his death, this
depiction of the resurrection (with its triumphant accompanying score) allows people to “live
with the false assumption that the struggle against sin and death is over with the triumph of the
resurrection.”42
Such a triumph “would leave unfulfilled Jesus‟s message which predicted
persecutions and death for those who were to continue his work.”43
Rather than calling for a
continuation of Jesus‟s spirit, it assures the viewer that God‟s work has been accomplished—and
to not worry because all suffering turns out good in the end.
For Ellacuría, Jesus‟s embodiment was not just in flesh, but
was incorporated in human history. . . . One could say that the true historical body of
Christ, and therefore the preeminent locus of his embodiment and his incorporation is . . .
the poor and the oppressed of the world. . . . [T]he church by its very nature is the church
of the poor and that, as church of the poor, it is the historical body of Christ.44
Because the true historical body of Christ is more than just his physical body, but is the poor and
oppressed who are working for the salvation of others, the true resurrection of the body of Christ
is also more than the continued life of his physical body, but is the continued life of the historical
19
body of Christ as the poor and oppressed who are proclaiming and working for the Kingdom of
God. As Sobrino puts it:
If resurrection is life in its fullness, it can only be love in its fullness, it can only
be love its fullness. How can one live in fullness in this life? The answer is simple: by
repeating the following of Jesus in the spirit of Jews on this earth. The one who lives in
this way lives even now as someone raised to life amid the very conditions of history.45
As Zizek points out, the apostle Paul‟s witness of Christ was not in the stories of Jesus of
Nazareth, but instead his witness was that of the cross and reality of Christ‟s resurrection.
Because in much of Christian tradition it is Paul who replaces the betraying Judas as Jesus‟s
apostle, it is important that the person who heralds the Christian community does so in the
betrayer‟s place. And thus, just as a betrayer carries on Wallace‟s revolutionary spirit, it is
Paul—in Judas‟s position—who carries on the revolutionary spirit of the cross:
Paul more or less totally ignores Jesus‟s particular acts, teachings, parables. . . . What
matters to him is not Jesus as a historical figure, only the fact that he died on the Cross
and rose from the dead—after confirming Jesus‟s death and resurrection, Paul goes on to
his true Leninist business, that of organizing the new party called the Christian
community.46
So rather than being concerned with the traditional stories of Jesus, Paul is instead “a thoroughly
engaged fighter who ignores distinctions that are not relevant to the struggle.”47
While Zizek and liberation theologians would differ on the importance of the historical
figure of Christ, the latter would agree with Zizek that what emerges from the death of Christ “is
the Holy Spirit, which is not Other, but the community (or, rather, collective) of believers: the
„neighbor‟ is a member of our collective.”48
This
“Holy Spirit” designates a new collective held together . . . by a fidelity to a Cause . . .
that runs across and suspends the distinctions of the existing social body. . . . [H]is
universe is no longer that of the multitude of groups that want to “find their voice,” and
assert their particular identity, their “way of life,” but that of a fighting collective
grounded in the reference to an unconditional universalism.49
20
From the perspective of liberation theology, this unconditional universalism is the option for the
poor, the call that none should live under the oppression of poverty. And like Paul‟s new
community, liberation theology‟s “crucified people” “transcends any embodiment in history that
may take place for the sake of its salvation in history. . . . The crucified people thus remains
somewhat imprecise insofar as it is not identified, at least formally, with a specific group in
history.”50
For liberation theology, to have the spirit is to participate in the liberating spirit of Christ.
As Jon Sobrino notes, “The spiritual life is not something „regional,‟ and still less does it stand in
opposition to another, „material‟ kind of life. . . . No, spirituality is the spirit with which we
confront the real. It is the spirit with which we confront the concrete history in which we live.”51
This spirit, like Zizek‟s Holy Spirit, is not a transcendent Other, but is rather the spirit of
liberation as understood through distorting perspective of the preferential option of the poor. As
such, while liberation theologians would not directly concur with Zizek‟s conclusion that
Christianity is the “religion of atheism,” they would agree that atheism—or at least certain types
of atheism—are not precluded from Christian liberation. To the contrary, according to Pablo
Richard,
What is really present and immediate to the great masses is what we call revolutionary
atheism. This is the political, militant atheism of those who do battle for justice and are
involved in the liberation practice. This type of atheism profoundly challenges Christian
faith, but does not normally appear as an enemy of Christians. Indeed, believing and
nonbelieving revolutionaries meet in a common practice, in a common historical project,
and regard each other as comrades. Both revolutionary atheists and committed Christians,
different though they may be in language and motivation, entertain a critical attitude
toward religion.52
Adding to Richard, Sobrino notes that “the option for the poor is the heritage, not of Christians
and believers alone, but of many other human beings as well.”53
21
For Zizek, his ultimate conclusion is in line with the critical attitude toward
institutionalized religion. Closing up The Puppet and the Dwarf, he writes:
[I]t is possible today to redeem this core of Christianity only in the gesture of abandoning
the shell of its institutional organization (and, even more so, of tis specific religious
experience). . . . That is the ultimate heroic gesture that awaits Christianity: in order to
save its treasure, it has to sacrifice itself—like Christ, who had to die so that Christianity
could emerge.54
It is here that the theologians of liberation would depart from Zizek. This is not to say, however,
that they are not critical of the institutionalized—Catholic—Church, as they see the Church and
traditional Christianity as part of the oppressive forces that liberation theology confronts.
According to Ellacuría, the historical institutional church, far from being symbolic of the
crucified people and the Kingdom of God, has largely been a force for the rich and oppressive.
He writes: “the historical world and the church‟s institutions have been universalized from a
preferential option for the rich and powerful. . . . [T]he church has become worldly. That is, it
has . . . shaped its message and even its institutions more from the standpoint of a power that
dominates and controls than from that of a ministry that serves.”55
However, far from calling out
to kill the Church—to sacrifice it as Christ sacrificed himself—liberation theology instead seeks
to transform the church to carry on what they believe that the cross of Christ pointed to: a life
that sought to dissolve the emphasis of a higher transcendent salvation and replace it with an
emphasis on the temporal salvation of the poor and oppressed.
Thus, rather than abandon the Church and its sacraments altogether, liberation theology
seeks to understand them and symbolize them through the perspectival distortion of the
preferential option for the poor. Recognizing that an emphasis on transcendence and eternity
over imminence and temporality does, in fact, act as Marx‟s opiate for the masses, Ellacuría
22
urges that by reversing these emphases, “the Christian faith, far from becoming an opiate—and
not only a social opiate—should establish itself for what it is: a principle of liberation.”56
In 1980, Oscar Romero, the Archbishop of San Salvador and mentor of Ellacuría, gave a
sermon in which he reflected on his work for the poor and the threats of violence that he was
receiving for his work. He said, “I have frequently been threatened with death. I must tell you
that, as a Christian, I do not believe in death, but in resurrection. If they kill me I will rise again
in the Salvadoran people. . . . Martyrdom is a grace I do not think I deserve. But if God accepts
my life, let my blood be a seed of freedom and the sign that hope will soon become reality.”57
Like William Wallace‟s dying words, these became his call for freedom from his cross as he was
assassinated two weeks later while administering mass—a fate Ellacuría and several of his
associates would experience nine years later.
The final lines of The Passion are from Roman soldiers reacting to the quaking earth
which followed Jesus‟s death in Matthew‟s Gospel: “Cassius! Hurry! . . . He‟s dead! . . . Make
sure!” This “Make sure!” takes on a different meaning from different perspectival distortions
from both Zizek and liberation theologians. Zizek‟s response, along with the Roman soldiers, is
to say “Yes! Make sure he is dead. Make sure the transcendent God is dead! And make sure that
his Church dies as well! Replace him!” To the contrary, liberation theology cries out: “No! Make
sure he lives—not in his physical body—but through his spirit in us! Make sure that his death
was not in vane! Make sure that his fight for the poor lives on!”
1 Slavoj Zizek, The Puppet and the Dwarf: The Perverse Core of Christianity (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2003): 171. 2 There are numerous liberation theologies that have arisen both along with and influenced by Latin American liberation theology—such as black liberation theology, feminist liberation theology, and queer liberation theology. For the purposes of this paper I use the term “liberation theology” to refer exclusively to the liberation theology of Latin America that developed in the mid- to late-twentieth century. Unless otherwise noted, all cited liberation theology articles are from Ignacio Ellacuría and Jon Sobrino, eds., Mysterium Liberationis: Fundamental Concepts of Liberation Theology (Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books, 1993). 3 For the purposes of this paper I use ‘traditional theologies of the cross’ to refer to what Zizek calls the “two main interpretations of how Christ’s death deals with sin; sacrificial and participatory.” Zizek, Puppet and Dwarf, 102.
23
4 Zizek, Puppet and the Dwarf, 137. 5 Ibid., 136. 6 Ibid., 69. 7 Ibid., 75. 8 Ibid., 78-79. 9 Gustavo Guierrez, “Option for the Poor,” 235-50. 10 Robert Oliveros, “History of Liberation Theology,” 4; emphasis added. 11 Ignacio Ellacuría, “The Church of the Poor,” 547. 12 Ignacio Ellacuría, “The Crucified People,” 588. 13 Ibid., 586 14 Ibid., 587. 15 Ibid. 16 Ibid., 586. 17 Ibid., 588. 18 Javier Jiménez Limón, “Suffering, Death, Cross, and Martyrdom,” 714. 19 David Edelstein, “Jesus H. Christ: The Passion, Mel Gibson's Bloody Mess,” Slate Online, February 24, 2004. http://www.slate.com/id/2096025/ (accessed April 29, 2011). 20 Jon Sobrino, “Central Position of the Reign of God,” 366. 21 Zizek, Puppet and the Dwarf, 13. 22 Ibid. 23 Ellacuría, “The Church of the Poor,” 557. 24 Ignacio Ellacuría, “The Historicity of Christian Salvation,” 256. 25 Ellacuría, “Historicity of Christian Salvation,” 276. 26 Ibid., 278. 27 Zizek, Puppet and Dwarf, 138. 28 Ellacuría, “Historicity of Christian Salvation,” 279. 29 This is from the English subtitles of the film, whereas the movie itself is all spoken in Latin and Aramaic. Gibson’s original plan was to play the film without subtitles, implying that the truth of the film was beyond language. 30 Zizek, Puppet and Dwarf, 97-98. 31 “Mel Gibson’s Great Passion: Christ’s Agony as You’ve Never Seen It,” Zenit Online. March 6, 2003 http://www.zenit.org/article-6723?l=english (accessed May 1, 2011). 32 Zizek, Puppet and Dwarf, 138. 33 Ibid., 51. 34 “Mr. Deity and the Really Big Favor,” Mr. Deity, season 1, episode 2. http://mrdeity.com/s1ep2.html (accessed April 30, 2011). 35 Zizek, Puppet and Dwarf, 126. 36 Ibid., 124-25. 37 Ibid., 138. 38 Ibid., 169. 39 Ibid., 137. 40 Ibid., 127. 41 Ellacuría, “The Crucified People,” 584. 42 Ibid., 585. 43 Ibid., 584. 44 Ellacuría, “The Church of the Poor,” 546. 45 Jon Sobrino, “Spirituality and the Following of Jesus, 696. This does not, however, mean that liberation theology completely denies the material bodily resurrection of Jesus. See Carlos Bravo, “Jesus of Nazareth, Christ the Liberator,” 436-38. 46 Zizek, Puppet and the Dwarf, 9. 47 Ibid., 112. 48 Ibid., 138.
24
49 Ibid., 130. 50 Ellacuría, “The Crucified People,” 602. 51 Sobrino, “Spirituality and the Following of Jesus,” 680-81. 52 Pablo Richard, “Theology in the Theology of Liberation,” 155. 53 Sobrino, “Central Position,” 374. 54 Zizek, Puppet and the Dwarf, 171. 55 Ignacio Ellacuría, “Utopia and Prophecy in Latin America,” 303. 56 Ellacuría, “The Church of the Poor,” 560. 57 Qtd in Javier Jimenez Limon, “Suffering, Death, Cross, and Martyrdom,” 715.