Don't you find it odd that at a time when so many people profess not to believe in God, religion appears to be a subject enjoyed by the masses in almost all forms of multi-media? To mention but a few examples, we've had the stage-shows Jesus Christ Superstar and Godspell; the books The God Delusion and The Dawkins Delusion; umpteen TV comedies from All Gas and Gaiters to the inimitable Vicar of Dibley, and the film Life of Brian. Now, it appears, there's a new film about to hit our cinema screens. Titled Religulous it seems that the producers unashamedly want to espouse the same anti-religious zeal which makes for best-selling status. The film, we're told, 'takes on the pieties of religion'.
RELIGION AND COMEDY
Well bully for them! We wouldn't want too many pieties in society, would we, when we can have the foolish things of the world? Isn't it so much better to have the profanity and violence of gang-warfare, knife-crime, drugs and greed? And who, in their right mind, would promote the cohesion of the church which, for all its failings, continues to grow worldwide, when we can have divorce, family breakdown and the broken society identified by politicians? Actually, when it comes to taking on the pieties of religion, few do so better than Adrian Plass, famously author of The Sacred Diary of Adrian Plass Aged 371/2 a spiritual parody of Sue Townsend's The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole Aged 13 1/2
SCIENCE VERSUS RELIGION
What interests me about the proponents of secularism is the way they treat evolution as a religion. The arguments of Richard Dawkins's, an atheist, strike me as being astonishingly zealous and narrow-minded for a scientist. I thought science was all about open-mindedness, exploration and thinking the unthinkable? Being sufficiently broad-minded, in fact, to wonder whether God might not have been clever enough to build carbon-datable millennia into his creation, just as he built age into the first man - who could easily, otherwise, have been no more than a sperm and an ovum, a fetus, or a baby!
COMEDY ROUTINES
Then there's the Vicar who is not the expected 'man with a Bible, a beard and bad breath, but a babe with a bob-cut and a magnificent bosom'. In the Vicar of Dibley, the lovable Dawn French presents an entirely opposite point of view: warm and fuzzy and down-to-earth in a way that I can't help feeling would please the parable-telling, mixing-with-sinners Jesus, no end. Who invented comedy, after all?
IF IT'S PROFITABLE, IT'S NOT TABOO
But there is a sinister side to all of this. The filmmakers, according to a report in the New York Times, deny that they pick on easy targets. Oh yeah? So why are there no films I can think of ridiculing Islam? Could it be that producers don't want to attract the sort of fatwa which has dogged the heels of author Salmon Rushdie? Or is it that Christians simply turn the other cheek and don't feel the need to defend their faith by such means? When asked about the taboo of making a film like this, Larry Charles brushed the question aside with the throwaway line that if it's profitable, then it's not taboo. Or at least, tabooishness doesn't matter so much.
FOOLISHNESS OF GOD
Accused of targeting extremists, star of the film, Bill Maher, defends the notion that all religion is extremist, by pointing to the concepts that God had a son, that he's a single parent, that the son went on a suicide mission, and that Christians, worldwide, drink his blood on Sundays. Put like that, it sounds as crazy and ridiculous as he claims it to be. But isn't that exactly what God himself says about faith? 'Do not deceive yourselves. If any one of you thinks he is wise by the standards of this age, he should be a "fool" so that he may become wise. For the wisdom of this world is foolishness in God's sight.'
So, bring it on, say I. Because the more foolish and fun-poking the book, film, TV programme, the greater the audience. And if it keeps people talking about God, well then isn't that an apposite demonstration of man's wisdom being foolishness in God's sight? Hang on a moment. I think I can hear him laughing at our puny efforts right now! What do you think?
Mel Menzies, November 2008
The author of a number of books, one a Sunday Times No. 4 Bestseller, Mel is also an experienced Speaker and has addressed live audiences of between 20 and 700+ in addition to participating in TV and Radio chat shows. She has led Family Forums, Marriage Enrichment and Writing Workshops. She currently runs Creative Writing Courses on her blog http://www.melmenzies.co.uk/blog Her acclaimed novel, A Painful Post Mortem, may be purchased online at http://www.melmenzies.co.uk
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