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Sweet Baby Jesus had a beard
Greg Clarke
It’s quite a confession, I know, but I can’t get enough of Will Ferrell. I crack up as soon as I see the too-close-together eyes of the former Saturday Night Live comic and star of the enjoyably stupid Talladega Nights (and a few good serious films, too). And he really did do the best Dubya impersonation. What’s not to love?
Up there in my top ten Ferrell scenes is the ‘Baby Jesus Prayer’ from Talladega Nights. Ferrell plays Ricky Bobby, a massively successful yet profoundly dumb racing car driver. At dinner, Ricky Bobby leads the family in prayer to “Baby Jesus”. Ricky’s wife, Carly (he thanks the Lord that she is “a stone-cold fox”) interrupts Ricky mid-prayer to remind him: “You know, sweetie, Jesus did grow up. You don’t have to always call him baby”.
“I like the Christmas Jesus best,” Ricky responds, “And I’m saying grace!”
| It’s hard to go past the Christmas Jesus, snugged up in the manger with
the cattle a-lowing around him. In fact, it’s so domestic and perfumed
an image of Jesus that one of the Christmas songs even makes the
outrageous claim, “no crying he makes”. I have no doubt that Mary and
Joseph would beg to differ, but “dear tiny sweet baby Jesus” is the
image that appeals most to Ricky Bobby and, I suspect, to many of us. Baby Jesus Christianity is what we see around us at Christmas—immature, unrealistic, comical, domesticated. It’s Jesus without the Christ, the baby without the adult (“He was a man! He had a beard!” Ricky’s elderly father protests mid-prayer). It’s white-picket fence Christianity, with its emphasis on a certain kind of subdued family life, ‘niceness', sensible shoes and leaving your brain at the door. It’s the kind of Christianity that gets associated with the flat-world theory, sentimentality and social irrelevance. |
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| Then there is the social Jesus, the man whose teachings spilled over
into political practices that have, on most readings of it,
strengthened the backbone of Western society. Without the teachings of
Jesus, it is unclear whether we would have developed the argument for
human rights based on individual dignity, whether democratic politics
would have emerged, or whether freedom of conscience would have won out
over tyranny. Secular historian Professor Rodney Stark is frank in his
book, The Victory of Reason: “Christianity created Western Civilization” (p.233). There is also the Jesus of theology, a figure stretched and pulled in different directions by different traditions. But the core of Christian teaching is common: Jesus reveals God to the world, and his death and reported resurrection are understood to achieve peace between wayward human beings and a holy God. That mystery is at the heart of any understanding of Christian faith. |
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| 15-Feb-2009 10:23 PM Anonymous | |
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| 01-Jun-2009 02:02 PM Jimmy_C | |
| Great article, such a funny movie too. I will be sharing this with my life group of Will Ferrell fans. Keep up the great work Dr Clarke | |
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