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THE
BOURNE IDENTITY
SPIRITUAL CONNECTIONS
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THE BOURNE IDENTITY
THE SPIRITUAL CONNECTION
This page was created on June 14, 2002
This page was last updated on
May 30, 2005
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SPIRITUAL
CONNECTIONS
WHO AM I?
"The
crowd is composed of individuals, but it must also be in the power
of each one to be what he is: an individual; and no one, no one
at all, no one whatsoever is prevented from being an individual
unless he prevents himself—by becoming one of the masses."
- SØREN AABYE KIERKEGAARD
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Jason
Bourne. He has no past. And he may have no future. His memory
is blank. He only knows that he was fished out of the Mediterranean
Sea, his body riddled with bullets.
His
question:
Who am I?
Your
question:
Who are you?
HINDU
PROVERB
God wills a rich harmony, not a colorless uniformity.
Best-known
American Unitarian WILLIAM ELLERY CHANNING (1780–1842):
Every human being is intended to have a character of his own;
to be what no others are, and to do what no other can do.
Lecturer and missionary OSWALD CHAMBERS (1874–1917):
Every man carries his kingdom within, and no one knows what is
taking place in another’s kingdom. “No one understands
me!” Of course they don’t, each one of us is a mystery.
There is only one who understands you, and that is God.
German
philosopher FRIEDRICH WILHELM NIETZSCHE (1844–1900):
Every man knows well enough that he is a unique being, only once
on this earth; and by no extraordinary chance will such a marvelously
picturesque piece of diversity in unity as he is ever be put together
a second time.
Writer SYDNEY J. HARRIS (1917–1986):
Every single person has one thing that he can do a little better
than most people around him, and he has a sacred obligation to
himself to find out what that thing is and to do it. (Most saints,
after all, have been men and women, not who soared to heights
of achievement, but who sank to depths of service we would not
dream of.)
Religious
author ERWIN W. LUTZER:
Thank God for the way he made you. You are special, distinct and
unique. You were not made from a common mold.
Top
selling author IRVING WALLACE:
To be one’s self, and unafraid whether right or wrong, is
more admirable than the easy cowardice of surrender to conformity.
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BIBLICAL
CONNECTIONS
WHO AM I?
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Writer
and scholar C. S. LEWIS:
Each of the redeemed shall forever know and praise some one aspect
of the divine beauty better than any other creature can. Why else
were individuals created, but that God, loving all infinitely,
should love each differently?
. . . If all experience God in the same way and returned him an
identical worship, the song of the church triumphant would have
no symphony, it would be like an orchestra in which all the instruments
played the same note
. . . . Heaven is a city and a body because the blessed remain
eternally different
. . . . For doubtless the continually successful, yet never completed,
attempt by each soul to communicate its vision to all others
. . . is also among the ends for which the individual was created.
Radio personality CHARLES R. SWINDOLL:
God, our wise and creative Maker, has been pleased to make everyone
different and no one perfect. The sooner we appreciate and accept
that fact, the deeper we will appreciate and accept one another,
just as our Designer planned us.
YOU
ARE CREATED IN GOD'S IMAGE
(From Holman's
Bible Dictionary)
-Vernon
O. Elmore
IMAGE
OF GOD A biblical description of the unique nature of
human beings in their relationship to the Creator God.
“And God said, Let us make man in our image, after our likeness”
(Gen. 1:26b). This passage contains a key to the understanding
of humans and their nature. Scholars through the ages have sought
to unravel the mystery of that statement. The psalmist asked,
“What is man?” (Ps. 8:4). Philosophers, theologians,
psychologists, and anthropologists have constantly explored that
topic. All have realized that the human being “is fearfully
and wonderfully made” (Ps. 139:14).
A SPECIAL CREATION
According to the Scriptures, humans are not an evolutionary accident
but a special creation. Human beings were purposefully produced
by God to fulfill a preordained role in His world. They have peculiar
qualities that somehow reflect the nature of God Himself and set
them apart and above all other created beings.
Image and Likeness
Some Bible students have tried to make a distinction in the meaning
of “image” and “likeness.” Image has been
considered the essential nature of humans as God’s special
creation, and likeness as reflecting this image in such qualities
as goodness, grace, and love. They maintain that humankind in
the Fall retained the image but lost the likeness. The two words,
however, seem to identify the same divine act. The repetition
represents the Hebrew literary style of parallelism used for emphasis.
The Hebrew selem or image refers to a hewn or carved image (1
Sam. 6:5; 2 Kings 11:18) like a statue, which bears a strong physical
resemblance to the person or thing it represents. The word likeness,
demuth, means a facsimile. Compare 2 Kings 16:10, “fashion”
or “pattern” (NASB), “sketch” (NIV, REB),
“exact model” (TEV). Neither of the words imply that
persons are divine. They were endowed with some of the characteristics
of God. There is a likeness but not a sameness.
Persons as Body-Soul
Many different views seek to explain the nature of the likeness.
Genesis 2:7 says, “the Lord God formed man of the dust of
the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life;
and man became a living soul.” In creation God endowed persons
with a spiritual aspect of life. This passage says that man became
a soul, not that he had a soul. A person is both body and soul,
or more accurately, body-soul. The Old Testament supports this
holistic view of persons who are not segmented into parts known
as body, soul, and spirit. Genesis 1:20 uses the Hebrew expression,
nephesh chayah, “living soul” for “moving creature
that has life,” that is the animals. Compare 1:24; 9:10,
16; Lev. 11:10.
Early theologians were greatly influenced by Greek philosophy
in their interpretation of the image of God. The Greeks separated
between the material and the spiritual. They saw an individual
as a spirit being living in a physical body. This Greek dualism
was the background out of which the early Christian theologians
drew their understanding. The church fathers believed that the
image of God resided in the soul or the spirit of each person.
Humankind as Persons Who are humans? The Bible portrays them as
self-conscious, willful, innovative entities who, under God, preside
over their environment. In other words, they are persons. God
made each male and female a person in the likeness of His own
personhood. Nothing else in all creation can be called a person.
Personhood encompasses individuals in their entirety, body and
spirit, as rational, loving, responsible, moral creatures.
Reflections of Personhood A man or woman is a person, as God is
a Person. Such personal uniqueness is reflected in self-awareness
and God-awareness. Human individuality is implied in personhood.
God said “I am that I am” (Ex. 3:14). Persons also
are separate entities with individual personalities, sets of values,
inclinations, and responsibilities. Every human being is an original.
Humans created in God’s image share His rational
nature.
People have the power to think, analyze, and reflect even upon
abstract matters. They cannot be defined by or confined to material
attributes. As God is spiritual (John 4:24), persons are spiritual.
This spiritual kinship makes possible communication with God.
The Bible teaches that human beings have purpose.
They have an instinctive need to be something and to do something.
They have a responsible intuition and an inner call to duty. The
human race has a unique sense of “oughtness.” Humans
are moral creatures. They can and do make moral judgments (Gen.
2:16-17). Persons have a censoring conscience which they may defy.
They are choice makers; they can obey their highest instincts
or follow their most morbid urges. A human is the only creature
who can say no to God. Humans are autonomous persons. God endowed
them with the freedom to govern their own lives.
This same autonomy makes possible fellowship with God.
No person could have a meaningful relationship with a robot. Real
fellowship can take place only between two authentic persons.
God created “man” in His own image because He wanted
a relationship with another sovereign person.
-Copyright c 1991 Holman Bible Publishers.
All rights reserved. International copyright secured.
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FROM
SILKY FORCE
ADDITIONAL CONNECTIONS
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1.
Regarding the film's ending with the pan from hilltop to seaside.
It struck me that this also symbolizes the spiritual struggle that
ends in the heart's ease of heaven.
2. The initial rescue, the act of "fishing" Jason out of
the ocean is also symbolically rich with the boat representing the
Church (note that we call the physical gathering place within the
building the "nave," a ship-related term) and the fishermen
unwittingly acting out Jesus' command that we become "fishers
of men."
3. In ancient Mesopotamian religion, salt water (like the Mediterranean)
represented chaos -- and Jason is rescued from the chaos of confusion
through the course of the story. |
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