The Passion of the Christ
The Passion of the Christ (2004) Suffering as Revelation “He was despised and rejected by men; a man of sorrows, and acquainted with grief.” — Isaiah 53:3 Mel Gibson’s The Passion of the Christ is not merely a religious film. It is an ordeal, a theological provocation, and a cinematic act of devotion bordering on obsession. It does not seek to explain Christianity; it seeks to enact it. To watch The Passion is not to follow a narrative in the conventional sense, but to submit to a ritual—one that drags the viewer through humiliation, violence, and unbearable endurance in order to confront a claim modern audiences instinctively resist: that salvation is inseparable from suffering. This is cinema as crucifixion. From the opening moments in the Garden of Gethsemane to the final breath on Golgotha, Gibson strips away sentimentality, irony, and psychological distance. What remains is flesh. Torn, bleeding, collapsing flesh. The film is relentless because it believes Christi...