Abdul Alhazred
Philosopher
- Joined
- Sep 4, 2003
- Messages
- 6,023
wolfgirl said:I still don't think that Jesus would have been "black" as in "African-American." He didn't come from deep Africa ...
Or America.
wolfgirl said:I still don't think that Jesus would have been "black" as in "African-American." He didn't come from deep Africa ...
Abdul Alhazred said:
Or America.![]()
evildave said:Of course, that "Give to Caesar what is his" quote marks him as a Tax & Spend Democrat. Maybe they misquoted Jesus.
All this is true, but I only said it might approach the next best thing to "true, historical, semitic rendering of Jesus by a good artist". It's undoubtedly a spiritual idealization, but at least it's a spiritual idealization by people who lived approximately in the region in which Jesus lived, and a lot closer to the time in which he lived there (hence, we may assume that the ideal was one conceived by people who themselves looked reasonably similar to the people of 1st-century Palestine).headscratcher4 said:Nice picture, considering it represents someone who supposedly died 500 years before the pictorial representation. It leads one to question the "representational" value of the art, and consider that it is projecting a "spiritual" ideal of Christ Pantocrator, rather than a picutrue of Jesus, the man. In any event, the picture has a slight middle-eastern/Egyptian look about it, which is what I would expect from a Monestary in the Siani.
It does, now that you mention it. And in my opinion, it also looks more than a little like Jim Caviezel in his Jesus makeup. It's tempting to conclude from that picture that 6th-century Semites living a stone's throw away from the Holy Land would not have found Caviezel's portrayal of Christ ethnically implausible. Which prompts the question: why does wolfgirl reach the opposite conclusion? I suspect she has some received ideas about what Semites are supposed to look like (apparently, they're supposed to look like "Abdul", whatever that means).Originally posted by MLynn
Looks a lot like the Shroud of Turin...
If I understand you correctly, Gibson's casting of Caviezel was calculated simultaneously to increase audience discomfort (because showing "Abdul" wouldn't have "bothered people as much") and reduce it (because showing Caviezel wouldn't "disturb people's comfort zone"). Which is it? This contradictory assertion makes no sense.Originally posted by wolfgirl
Taking a good-looking white guy and giving him a few vaguely ethnic-looking features still gives you the warm-and-fuzzy "he's one of us" feeling. Which makes the impact greater. If they had shown "Abdul" up there being tortured, I don't think it would've bothered people as much. And Mel Gibson knew that, so despite his lip-service to reality, he really wanted not to disturb people's comfort zone so that he could make lots of money.
Mel Gibson will never get another penny of my money. (Not that he'll need it now...)
It's usually meant to depict a book of Gospels. You can tell because sometimes the Christ Pantocrator is depicted with the book open, with NT verses showing (although sometimes, when closed, it's interpreted as the book of final judgment).Kopji said:So what's the book Jesus is holding with the cross on it?
ceo_esq said:If I understand you correctly, Gibson's casting of Caviezel was calculated simultaneously to increase audience discomfort (because showing "Abdul" wouldn't have "bothered people as much") and reduce it (because showing Caviezel wouldn't "disturb people's comfort zone"). Which is it? This contradictory assertion makes no sense.
wolfgirl said:
These assertions are not contradictory.
What I meant by disturbing people's comfort zone was questioning their comfortable belief in Jesus as a nice white boy...
Doesn't the negative connotation associated with the word "usury" come from the Bible? Pray tell why I should loan my hard-earned savings to you for a scheme that may wipe out those savings if I cannot expect to earn any profit even if the scheme does actually enrich you?evildave said:After all, the Bible is pro-usury, too.
Bottle or the Gun said:No, jesus is a pretty white guy with long eye lashes and a see-through chest, which is why you can see that creepy burning thorn-covered heart of his.
headscratcher4 said:What worries me is all of the portrayals of Jesus as white and a Republican...![]()
Looks a lot like the Shroud of Turin...