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Constantine's Sword (2008)
Release Date:
Friday, April 18, 2008
MPAA Rating:
NR
Genre:
Documentary
Starring:
Liev Schreiber, Phillip Bosco, Natasha Richardson, Eli Wallach
Written By:
James Carroll and Oren Jacoby
Director:
Oren Jacoby
Official Site:
Synopsis:
Why are intolerance, violence and war so deeply ingrained in religion? Why did the Cross become a rallying symbol for persecution? How does one man who loves the Church confront its history of crusade and conquest? CONSTANTINE'S SWORD, the latest film by Oscar-nominated documentarian Oren Jacoby, is an astonishing exploration of the dark side of Christianity, following acclaimed author and former priest James Carroll on a journey of
remembrance and reckoning. |
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Constantine's Sword (2008) | Review
No War is Holy
Darrel Manson
"And then it all changed. I began to see that this cross throws a shadow." James Carroll opens the film Constantine's Sword with this observation on the cross. Carroll, a former Roman Catholic priest who is now a writer, takes us on a bit of his personal journey to look into antisemitism and its place in church history going back to the Emperor Constantine in the Fourth Century. His book by the same title was published in 2001. This film by documentarian Oren Jacoby (who also directed a similarly themed Sister Rose's Passion) brings that book to life by following Carroll as he traces various aspects of antisemitism through various key points in history. It also updates the topic by bringing in the more recent events at the Air Force Academy that led to a 2004 scandal involving cadets, officers, and chaplains and spilling over into the Evangelical culture that pervades Colorado Springs where the Academy is located. Most of the film centers on how the Catholic Church has been an agent of antisemitism. (While the focus is on the Catholic Church, the problem applies to the broader church as well.) Coming from a Catholic background, Carroll stands as a critic within his tradition. He is not some outsider pointing out all the flaws. Rather this is the account of someone who has found the flaws in his tradition and wants to make sure these flaws are defeated when they rear their heads.After a section telling of the killing of Jews by mobs along the Rhine, he says, "I was a young Catholic brought into this perfect church. It was the place where human beings were entirely pure. We had saints; we knew who they were. And our priests and our bishops and our popes were holy, holy men. I hadn't a clue about the failure: priests, now I know, leading crusaders into this territory to kill Jews." The trouble, as Carroll sees it, is the merger of religion and power. It begins when Constantine brought Christianity not merely into acceptance, but into prominence in the Empire. He used the church to try to establish unity within the empire and had the army enforce that unity. Those outside the church, especially Jews, became targets. This union between church and power was the main force behind antisemitism through the next sixteen centuries, whether it involved kings or popes or (as more recently) Air Force chaplains. Carroll at times shows the ways the Church has aided Jews and celebrates the Vatican II document Nostra Aetate, which outlined the way Catholics should engage and accept people of different faiths. But he also tells us of times when Paul IV put Jews in ghettoes, or Pius XII was silent during the Holocaust.The goal is to see the ways the Church has failed in its treatment of Jews so that it will not do so again, either in regard to Jews or people of any other religion, especially in today's setting, Islam. In the film, John Pawlikowski, President of the International Council of Christians and Jews, tells Carroll, "If you want to make religion a constructive force in society, religions must begin with an honest admission of those moments when they haven't been a constructive force: when they've been a destructive force. And the thing that frustrates me to no end is when religious leaders get up and give the impression that religion has always been on the side of good and virtue. It hasn't. Let's be honest." The issue is alive today, not just in the scandal that took place at the Air Force Academy, but in the way the United States and its military is perceived by others around the world. The film has sound clips of President Bush talking about the "crusade" of the War on Terrorism and about the battle the U.S. wages against "evil." Although some have said such language is hyperbole or that the President just wasn't watching his words, Carroll says, "I'm convinced this really is a crusade. Islam is accused of violence as if Christianity is innocent." The ways he sees Evangelical Christianity becoming enmeshed in the military makes Carroll think that that fusion of religion and power is once again creating a dangerous mixture, one that can bring the idea that war is holy. Carroll's final words in the film are, "No war is holy."The film concludes with a wonderful cover by Aaron Neville of the Bob Dylan song, "With God on Our Side." That song is a wonderful summary of the film as we begin to see the hubris in claiming God is on our side as we kill God's children who are different from us. Copyright © 2008 Hollywood Jesus. All rights reserved.
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