Hugh Laurie (of House
fame) once said of acceptance speeches, "the
accepted custom, especially among my countrymen, is to play down one's
accomplishments; to blush, and stammer charmingly about luck, and teamwork, and
possibly the hand of God - which, when you think about it, is a ferociously
arrogant explanation for one's success."
While those of us with more
religious sensibilities may get our knickers twisted by his last comment,
secretly, I think we all agree. We've all seen the various and sundry Oscar
acceptance speeches in which actors and filmmakers alike thank Jesus for their
big wins and, somewhere in a secret part of ourselves, we wince a little. There’s
just something incredibly precocious about claiming God wanted you, above all
others, to win in your category.
And yet, it would also be
totally inaccurate to deny the hand of God in the Oscars. Just because He might
not have hand-picked a best picture winner doesn't mean He can’t use the Oscar
films as part of his plan and it certainly doesn't mean we shouldn't thank Him. Just look at some of the films that were
nominated:
A man’s conversion to
Catholicism and, ultimately, his sacrifice for something greater than himself
A salute to the daring of
a man who, despite the social leanings of the time, stood up for the dignity of
all people, regardless of color
...And many more films that served as testaments to hope,
beauty, the triumph of the human spirit, and yes, the goodness of God
(even ‘Django Unchained’ featured one of the few morally justifiable cradling a
rosary).
So here’s what I believe: is God sitting up in Heaven
staring mesmerized at a flat screen TV and rooting for a particular film to win
over the others? Of course not. But He’s still present.
This is because of the fact that, wherever there is beauty,
wherever there is truth, wherever there is goodness, there too is God. It is in
those places, perhaps most of all in those places, that God is worshiped.
So, with that in mind, I do not see the Oscars as a competition
between rival filmmakers. I see the Oscars as an opportunity for roughly a
billion people to tune in and, by witnessing the transcendent truth and beauty presented
in these pinnacles of cinema, worship God. And that’s something that, statue in
hand or not, we can all thank Jesus for.


No comments:
Post a Comment