The movie "300"

Today I went to see the movie 300 with a friend of mine.  It is the comic book version of the battle of the Spartans against the Persians.  Great liberties were taken, of course, with history.  The major one, I suppose, was with the anachronistic view of Greece as viewing freedom and justice and reason the way Americans do.  At the very end of the movie one of the principle characters (Boromir from Lord of the Rings) says that Sparta and Greece fight for the end of mysticism and tyranny.  Ironically, neither of these seems to be absent from the Greece of the majority as it is represented in the movie.  But it is understandable, then, how the Iranians have claimed that this is an anti-Iranian movie, especially when the Persians are represented as “barbarians” given to merciless atrocities and worship of their king as god.  It is hard to see how the Greeks fare any better in their use of atrocity and their “worship” of their Spartan king.

Nonetheless, this movie was amazingly entertaining, marred only by unnecessary appeal to more sensual interests with it’s nudity and portrayal of sexuality.  The action scenes and the camera work in and of itself are astoundingly beautiful.  The movement of the story and the character development keep one glued to one’s seat (as long as one has had the foresight to go to the bathroom before entering the theater and the wisdom not to drink a soft drink during the movie).

What spoke to me the most in this movie was the commitment of the Spartans to defend their country at all costs.  In contrast to one Spartan who was deformed and wasn’t allowed to fight, and who then betrayed the Spartans for a payment from the Persians, none of the rest could be bought, especially Sparta’s king.  I want to be unbuyable.  I want to have an integrity that stands the ultimate test.  I suspect I can’t do that without help from the Lord Jesus Himself, who displayed exactly that kind of integrity at the cross and throughout His time here on earth.  He struggled, and so will I, but He came out victorious by submitting to death on the cross.  God honored His submission with the resurrection.

Randall Johnson

About the Author

Randall Johnson

A full-time pastor since 1979, Randall originally graduated from Dallas Theological Seminary (ThM) in 1979 and from Reformed Theological Seminary (DMin) in 1998. He is married with four grown children and a pile of epic grandchildren.

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