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Sunday, September 23, 2012

Some thoughts about Rock Haven

I watched the movie Rock Haven last night.  As with a lot of movies, it provoked many thoughts that I wanted to share.  So first, a plot summary.

Brady is a devout Christian who has moved with his mother from Kansas to Rock Haven, California.  Soon after arriving, he sees a boy and is instantly attracted to him.  He later discovers that the boy is Clifford, the son of his next door neighbor.  Clifford and Brady quickly become friends and hang out together.  Brady is obviously uncomfortable around girls, so Clifford teaches him some moves that may help him out.  During one such session, Clifford feels Brady's crotch and Brady jumps away and Clifford tease him that he is aroused.  Brady avoids Clifford for a while, but then starts hanging out with him again.  A little while later, Clifford kisses him and Brady flees.  He later confronts Clifford about the fact that he is gay and the two of them avoid each other.

In the meantime, Brady is being set up by his mother with Peggy, a Christian girl who realizes that Brady is gay.  When Brady and Clifford are on the outs, Peggy asks him if he has boy troubles which Brady angrily denies.  Eventually, Brady goes back to see Clifford and the two of them start kissing.  Brady flees, confused by what is happening to him and torn between his religious beliefs and his strong feelings.  He decides to go with his feelings and eventually sleeps with Clifford.

Brady's mom know something is wrong, but can't figure out what it is.  The night that Clifford and Brady sleep together, Brady had told her that he was being driven to a church sleepover by Peggy.  When he gets back the next day, she tells him that Peggy was in a car accident and confront him about what is happening.  He tells her that he is gay and she flips out and pressures him into breaking up with Clifford.  She also gets Brady to go to a camp to "fix" him.  Clifford is heartbroken and goes to join his dad in Barcelona, but not before before asking Brady to reconsider.  Brady says he can't, but then goes home to his mother and tells her that he won't go to the camp.  She insists that he is making the biggest mistake of his life and he says that he already did.  He tells her that he knows she won't agree with him, but asks for her love to which she responds that he is always her son.  He forgives her for what has happened that then hugs her as she weeps in her arms.  The movie ends with him saying that the pain never ended, but he has never been closer to God.

Ok, so now for my thoughts.  As a faithful reader of my blogs, you should know that this is a struggle I have lived with for a long time.  Even though I have more or less come to terms with everything, it is not a struggle that goes away.  But, eventually, it becomes much the same as losing a parent, something that is always there, but not as much of an issue.

What I mainly want to talk about are Christians and how they treat others.  In the movie, Brady quotes the normal verse from Leviticus about not lying with men as you lie with women, which is pretty much the standard Bible verse any conservative Christian is going to bring up when the topic of homosexuality comes up.  What I always find amazing is how few conservative Christians seem to look at the rest of the Bible.

For a long time now (since I was in college), whenever I read the Bible, I am struck at how it is infused with the notion of God's Love.  Read I Corinthians Chapter 13 (http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1%20Corinthians+13&version=NIV) and see what St. Paul says about love.  Read the various parables that Jesus tells about loving neighbors (http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Luke%2010:25-37&version=NIV as one example).  Look at the Gospel of John Chapter 3 (http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=John%203:1-21&version=NIV).  Read what Jesus said about the Greatest Commandments (http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Matthew%2022:36-40&version=NIV).  Or look up one of the many other examples of the Bible talking about God's overwhelming love for us.  The Bible is a love story between us and God.  It is about His Love for us and how we should love one another.

What I find sad is that so many people who call themselves Christians ignore this basic duty.  Now, I do want to say that loving someone does not mean that you agree with everything they do and/or say.  I can disagree with you and still love you.  Many people confuse the two and think that disagreeing with something means you do not love them, therefore equating love with support of particular issues.  Sometimes, love is disagreeing when someone is doing something wrong.  However, how you express yourself shows your love (or lack thereof).  Talking about how "God hates fags!" or about how all homosexuals are condemned to Hell because they are homosexual is not love.

Which leads me to another point that Rock Haven illustrated beautifully.  Being homosexual is not a choice.  God created each and every one of us.  Being homosexual or heterosexual is a part of who each one of us is.  Therefore, your orientation is not sinful and is also beautiful.  God does not create mistakes.  He loves each of us and would not condemn us to Hell for something that is a part of how He made us.  Now, there is the issue of acting on those feelings, which is entirely different and within our control.  Everyone must choose how to live their own lives and then answer for those choices, one way or another.

As Christians, we are called to be love and to show that love to the world.  In doing so, we help others to see God as He is, Love incarnate.  So, go out and show love.  Be love.  Radiate love.

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

On why I like certain movies....

If you look at my DVD/Blu-Ray collection or the movies I watch, you'll notice that there are many romances or teen movies.  Alot of people wonder why I like movies like these.  After all, aren't they "formulaic", "boring", "predictable", or "not acted well"?  Watching a couple of movies like this yesterday, I felt moved (maybe inspired is a better term!) to explain why, so here it is.

I first want to acknowledge that these sorts of movies are formulaic and therefore predictable.  And I am totally cool with that.  The main reason I watch movies or TV is because I want to experience someone else's life (i.e. escapism [well, sort of]). Consequently, I honestly don't care about watching all original stories.  Sure, I like some movies like Inception that require immense amounts of thinking and interpreting, but for the most part, I want a movie that I can just relax and watch.  Teen movies and romances fill this little niche perfectly.

Also, I love that these movies aspire to bring forth the innocence in the watcher.  When we were children, we believed that true love existed if you looked, that good always triumphed over evil, and that things would turn out right if you worked and believed.  As adults, we lose this sense of innocence and wonder.  It can be a good thing to lose, but sometimes I know that I just want it back.  I still believe in true love, that there is one person out there somewhere for each of us.  But sometimes when the world is pressing down on you and everything looks like crap, I just need to be reminded of these feelings.  I need to be reminded that hope does exist, that love is out there, and that things can and do get better (somehow).

As I have mentioned before, I am a romantic (see above!).  I like sentimentality, I like watching someone fall in love, and I like watching people transform themselves into a better person because of love.  Most of my favorite romances are the romances where a bad boy (or girl) transforms themselves into a good person for the sake of love.  Pacey from Dawson's Creek, Nathan from One Tree Hill, and Landon from A Walk to Remember are three of my favorites, although I could mention several more.  There is a something special about believing the transformative power of love.  While I can't define it, I just know that believing in how love can transform you makes me feel better about myself and life.

So, I enjoy these movies.  Whether it is trying to escape my life into a movie about someone else, the uplifting transformative power of love, or just a sense of romance, I really enjoy them.

So there you have it.  :-)