Claudia Has Something To Say, Girlfriends

Girlfriends (1978 film)

Girlfriends (1978 film) (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Its nebulous ending is not much of a flaw.  Claudia Weill‘s Girlfriends (1978) is still a pretty good film about a young Jewish woman (Melanie Mayron) who loses her live-in friendship with BFF Anne (Anita Skinner) when the latter moves out to get married.  The arrangement worked, but for Susan, the Jewish girl, very little after that works very well, including a foolish dalliance with a married rabbi.  On her own, Susan painstakingly searches:  for herself no less than for an actual job that will relieve her poverty.

Weill directed and Vicki Polon wrote this trenchant, fundamentally comic (and low-budget) picture.  At 88 minutes long it is soundly interesting with a mild edginess.  Memorably does Mayron play the charming and errant Susan.  Girlfriends is enjoyable, despite some visually ugly nudity.  “Sarna at the Well” (an artistic 1939 photograph by Gotthard Schuh) it ain’t.*

*Susan, by the way, is a budding photographer.

*I have yet to see “Sarna at the Well” on the Internet.  It is displayed in the book, Nude Photography by Peter-Cornell Richter.

 

“If Anyone Gives A Cup Of Cold Water. . .”

English: fragment of the Gospel of Matthew

English: fragment of the Gospel of Matthew (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

“And if anyone gives a cup of cold water to one of these little ones because he is my disciple, I tell you the truth, he will certainly not lose his reward.”

This is from Matthew’s Gospel (NIV), and I do not believe that by “little ones” Jesus meant believing children (merely).  He meant believers period.

A person who provides a follower of Christ with a cup of water will not lose his Heaven-sent reward, whatever it may be.  But if he’s unsaved, what does it matter that he will get a reward if after he dies he just goes to Hell?  How much value can the reward have?

The Two Dudes In Luke 16

Those who believe the story of Lazarus and the rich man (Luke 16) is a parable are right.  If they also believe it’s a parable about a rich man and a poor man, they’re wrong.  Dressed in the royal color of purple (Judges 8:26) and having five brothers, the rich man, true to the character of a parable, symbolizes Judah: the (royal) tribe of Judah: the Jews of Judah.  The story has the rich man in a tormenting fire, although it’s not even certain he is being actually tormented.  He is being judged or chastised, though, and he doesn’t like it.  That is, the Jews of Judah are being judged or chastised because they have violated the covenant of God.  The same fate will befall the rich man’s five brothers—five tribes.  All six of these Israelite tribes originated in the union of Jacob and Leah.

If the rich man is in Hell, as most Christians hold, it must be admitted that the Jews of Judah are in Hell, and that those of the other tribes will be too.  Do we really want to believe that?  One Jew after another goes to a place of everlasting torture?

In point of fact, where the rich man goes when he dies can be called “the invisible” or “the unseen” (hades), and there’s nothing in the text about the distress in this place being eternal.  In my view, if the Greek word kolasis (“punishment” in Matthew 24:46) means correction, the Jews of Judah are being chastised in order to be corrected.

And what about Lazarus?  Simple: he represents saved Gentiles.  More on that later, perhaps.

 

The World Of “Annihilation”

Natalie Portman, actress.

Natalie Portman, actress. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Five women (Natalie Portman, Jennifer Jason Leigh, et al.) investigate a dangerous swampland captured by something known as “the Shimmer,” previously investigated by military operatives who lost their lives.  This is the premise of the recent movie Annihilation (2018), a sci-fi tale largely nonsensical and thus inferior—but intriguing too.  It is also deeply disturbing, in a way that has the ring of truth about life.

What seems to be the case about the Shimmer area is that it is representative of pathology.  It is a place of metastasizing, of mutation, of refracted DNA.  The dialogue contains references to cancer, dementia, etc.  The women are in a sphere of deadly catastrophe essentially no different from their own.  What has to be done to annihilate the annihilator?

Sophisticated acting by Portman and Leigh and others enrich the film, and director Alex Garland “has crafted sequences of strange splendor” (Alan Scherstuhl).  Annihilation, in truth, is neither a success nor a failure (I don’t know about the novel from which it is adapted).  It is simply disappointing as sci-fi and compelling as representational art.

He Said He Went To Hell

Did you ever see the late Dr. Richard Eby, a Christian physician, on Christian TV?  Like Bill Wiese, he claimed to have visited Hell (in the guise of an unbeliever) and to have witnessed Revelation’s lake of fire.  In his telling, the lake of fire is not merely the “second death,” as the Book of Revelation teaches.  But Christian universalist Gary Amirault maintains that Eby eventually told him he believes God will save all mankind, and that he read a letter from Eby to his cousin with statements to that effect.  Curious.  Was Eby not sent to Hell, after all?  Did he never see the damning lake of fire?  He used to assert that these were loci of everlasting punishment.

Another thing that should be pointed out is that Eby declared on TV that at some point Jesus told him Eby would still be alive when Christ made His second coming.  But the man died in 2002.  And this is to say nothing about whether in his stories about Hell there are the same kinds of contradictions that exist in Bill Wiese’s stories.