Tuesday, February 27, 2007

Review: "Jesus Camp"

A few weeks ago I rented 2006's Oscar-nominated documentary Jesus Camp. It has received a tremendous amount of criticism. The film follows several children (one of them, Rachel, is adorable) as they prepare for and attend Becky Fischer's evangelical "boot camp" for preteens. Bill Maher, ABC News, atheists, and many feminists drew negative attention to the film, hinting it was the American answer to Jihadism - training kids to be "warriors".

Because I have had some exposure to evangelical/pentacostal beliefs, this film wasn't as startling to me as it would be to, say, an atheist or an Episcopalian. I understand, for instance, that when Becky Fischer and her staff urges kids to be warriors, she is talking about spiritual warfare. When the kids chat about the possibility of martyrdom, they're discussing an infinitely more passive form of martyrdom than strapping bombs to themselves and going on a homicide/suicide mission. They just mean that if they are persecuted to death for their
faith, that's OK.

The directors of Jesus Camp claim they wanted to give an unbiased portrait of the camp. That's clearly not true. Their choice of outtakes alone points to their intention to portray the camp and the families who send their children there as a mixture of zealots and simpletons. One outtake only shows Levi and his brother watching a VeggieTales video called "Where's God When I'm Scared?", singing along to the song "God is Bigger than the Boogeyman". This is supposed to be disturbing? Now, I have this video. Z-kid and Demi have watched it many times ....it's great. The song is really catchy. And you must admit, even if you don't believe in Him, that if there was a God he would certainly be bigger than the Boogeyman.

Fundamentalism and dominionism bother me. I would never encourage a child Rachel's age to proselytize to strangers in the street, or teach a child to reject the concepts of climate change and evolution, as some of the parents in the film did. Are these kids being indoctrinated? Of course they are. But would you rather have this generation indoctrinated by consumer culture, schooled by Paris Hilton? Is it so bad to bring up children as moral, responsible citizens?

One thing I respect about Becky Fischer is that she didn't talk down to the kids. She didn't underestimate them. What I saw were children with purpose, dedication, and heart. Kids being told that if they so choose, they can be the greatest generation, and that each one of them is precious.

There are disturbing scenes: It's creepy seeing kids in religious ecstasy, babbling in tongues and being "slain in the Spirit" with tears pouring down their faces. The dominionist aspects are creepy. In the film's most-cited scene, a woman props a cardobard cutout of President Bush in front of the kids and listlessly commands them to bless him, "lay some [spiritual] warfare on him". It comes across as some kind of Christian, sympathetic-magic hoodoo. Ted Haggard is creepy. All in all, though, I found Jesus Camp considerably less creepy than the documentary Hell House, which taught kids (in a fun, extra-gory Halloween format!) that sex usually leads to suicide and suicide leads to Hell.

It wasn't so long after this movie came out that Ted Haggard was exposed in a gay prostitute scandal. This has been cited by critics, too, even though Haggard's brief appearance in the film was unrelated to the camp.

Becky Fischer was forced to close down the camp after the release of this movie. Her landlords received so many threats of vandalism and violence that they refused to lease the camp to her in the future. And Christians are the fascists?

5 comments:

Wandering Coyote said...

My brother saw this movie and was appalled and angered. I haven't seen it yet but I'll look for a download. Thanks for the review.

Gardenia said...

I agree with your post, Blueapples, about down the line...I will have to see this Jesus Camp. I think I've been there or to something like it. Lot rather have my kids there than lots of places, you are right. Haggard pulled a real booboo - that's a whole other post though, eh?

Hawkeyi's Blog said...

Mostly I don't have a problem with this Jesus camp stuff and in ways I encourage these types of experiences for kids. I think the word indoctrination gets over used lots in religion. I agree that there are many other influential things in life that are more concerning to me, examples like peer pressure to do drugs, experiment with sex without fear of consequences. The fact that we indoctrinate kids without question with our TVs clever corporate advertising telling us its okay treating our loved ones to Mcdonalds fat , sugar packed ,salt filled unhealthy food. Its got to be more damaging than Jesus camp. The numbers of deaths from cults are so low compared to heart disease from unhealthy diets, death by drinking and driving, drug overdose's, etc etc. Jesus camp does not seem to be a threatening issue. I'm more concerned at what the kids are learning from a tyrant President Bush , along with FOX, ABC, CNN that killing and destroying other people's children in other countries is the American way. Is this giving our children the message that killing others as fascists is okay at solving life's problems without dialog and diplomacy?
How does that compare to the 10 commandments as being bad influence?

S.M. Elliott said...

Agreed. Muuuch worse things kids can be (and are) doing than praying and reading the Bible. Some people are opposed to this particular brand of indoctrination only because they're liberal and don't want too many conservatives to crop up in this generation. Now, with Bush in office I'm not saying I blame them, but Bush won't be around forever. Christianity will.

S.M. Elliott said...

Gardenia - Oh yeah, I could do three or four posts on "telescandalism" and the particular problems that seem to plague religious men! But I won't. They do enough to drag their OWN names through the mud, don't they?