As I was reading another thread about faith, I was reminded of the final act of the movie The Poseidon Adventure (1972).
Reverend Scott (played by the brilliant Gene Hackman) was a renegade preacher who had been punished by his church for his rebellious attitude and sent to some remote African village. The ship he was traveling on met with disaster and capsized, and most of the movie has Reverend Scott leading a small group of passengers in the hope of being rescued. After a few in the group are killed along the way, Reverend Scott finally blows up and addresses God directly:
"What more do you want of us? We've come all this way, no thanks to you. We did on our own no help from you. We didn't ask you to fight for us but damn it, don't fight against us! Leave us alone! How many more sacrifices? How much more blood? How many more lives? Belle wasn't enough. Acres wasn't. Now this girl! You want another life? Then take me!"
Of course, Reverend Scott is a Christian preacher, but the ship itself was named after a Greek god, as the Captain describes: "The Greek God Poseidon. God of storms, tempests, earthquakes and other miscellaneous natural disasters. Quite an ill-tempered fellow."
I suppose one interpretation could be that, at least within the context of the story, Poseidon might actually be the real "god" here, not Jehovah. The ship was on its last voyage, about to be demolished by a wrecking crew waiting in Athens. The disaster could have been caused by Poseidon, who might have thought, "They're not wrecking that ship. I'm wrecking that ship. It's named after me, so it's mine." For a god described as an "ill-tempered fellow," it sounds almost plausible. It would actually be relatively easy to have faith in a god like Poseidon, since his description fits in with observable phenomena in known reality.
But Reverend Scott wasn't addressing Poseidon in his speech. He was addressing the God of the Bible, who is purportedly all about "love" and "compassion." But Scott wasn't even asking for love or compassion. All he wanted was for God to stop actively fighting against them. He wanted God to leave people alone. He didn't think people should be on their knees praying when action was required. "You could wear off your knees praying to God for heat in February. And icicles would grow from your upraised palms. If you're freezing, you burn the furniture. . .but you get off your knees."
And when Reverend Scott finally resorted to prayer at the end, he wasn't on his knees. He was on his feet, shaking his fist at God in anger and defiance.
I think I can see a lot of myself in Reverend Scott. If such a preacher actually existed in any church somewhere, I would attend his sermons. He believed that the church was for "more than just prayer."
So, my questions to the group here, both non-believers and believers in any religion:
- What are your general thoughts on Reverend Scott?
- In the context of the story, do you think that Reverend Scott would go to hell for his outright defiance?
- Is it possible that Poseidon actually existed and caused the disaster?
- What would you think of a church that punishes a preacher for his unorthodox sermons or the fact that he's rebellious, angry, defiant, and critical?
- How do you think God would answer Reverend Scott's tirade?
This, to me, points up a major failure of religion. Most religions seem to want people to focus on the supernatural, through prayer, meditation, etc., with the idea that somehow it would give people a connection to a higher power outside of this reality. Kind of like an ostrich sticking its head in the sand. Religion keeps enjoining people to become believers and have faith. But if they really are God's representatives on Earth, then why aren't they just as critical, angry, and rebellious as Reverend Scott?
Reverend Scott (played by the brilliant Gene Hackman) was a renegade preacher who had been punished by his church for his rebellious attitude and sent to some remote African village. The ship he was traveling on met with disaster and capsized, and most of the movie has Reverend Scott leading a small group of passengers in the hope of being rescued. After a few in the group are killed along the way, Reverend Scott finally blows up and addresses God directly:
"What more do you want of us? We've come all this way, no thanks to you. We did on our own no help from you. We didn't ask you to fight for us but damn it, don't fight against us! Leave us alone! How many more sacrifices? How much more blood? How many more lives? Belle wasn't enough. Acres wasn't. Now this girl! You want another life? Then take me!"
Of course, Reverend Scott is a Christian preacher, but the ship itself was named after a Greek god, as the Captain describes: "The Greek God Poseidon. God of storms, tempests, earthquakes and other miscellaneous natural disasters. Quite an ill-tempered fellow."
I suppose one interpretation could be that, at least within the context of the story, Poseidon might actually be the real "god" here, not Jehovah. The ship was on its last voyage, about to be demolished by a wrecking crew waiting in Athens. The disaster could have been caused by Poseidon, who might have thought, "They're not wrecking that ship. I'm wrecking that ship. It's named after me, so it's mine." For a god described as an "ill-tempered fellow," it sounds almost plausible. It would actually be relatively easy to have faith in a god like Poseidon, since his description fits in with observable phenomena in known reality.
But Reverend Scott wasn't addressing Poseidon in his speech. He was addressing the God of the Bible, who is purportedly all about "love" and "compassion." But Scott wasn't even asking for love or compassion. All he wanted was for God to stop actively fighting against them. He wanted God to leave people alone. He didn't think people should be on their knees praying when action was required. "You could wear off your knees praying to God for heat in February. And icicles would grow from your upraised palms. If you're freezing, you burn the furniture. . .but you get off your knees."
And when Reverend Scott finally resorted to prayer at the end, he wasn't on his knees. He was on his feet, shaking his fist at God in anger and defiance.
I think I can see a lot of myself in Reverend Scott. If such a preacher actually existed in any church somewhere, I would attend his sermons. He believed that the church was for "more than just prayer."
So, my questions to the group here, both non-believers and believers in any religion:
- What are your general thoughts on Reverend Scott?
- In the context of the story, do you think that Reverend Scott would go to hell for his outright defiance?
- Is it possible that Poseidon actually existed and caused the disaster?
- What would you think of a church that punishes a preacher for his unorthodox sermons or the fact that he's rebellious, angry, defiant, and critical?
- How do you think God would answer Reverend Scott's tirade?
This, to me, points up a major failure of religion. Most religions seem to want people to focus on the supernatural, through prayer, meditation, etc., with the idea that somehow it would give people a connection to a higher power outside of this reality. Kind of like an ostrich sticking its head in the sand. Religion keeps enjoining people to become believers and have faith. But if they really are God's representatives on Earth, then why aren't they just as critical, angry, and rebellious as Reverend Scott?