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archon, Aronofsky, Brian Houston, Brian Mattson, Dr Brian Mattson, Hillsong, houston, Movie Noah, Noah, Tubal-Cain, Tubal_Cain
Before reading the article, we would like to point out how intentionally deceitful the marketing of the movie Noah was to Christians. While some of the imagery does appear odd in the trailers, the mind of the average Christian may have concluded how Aronofsky may have interpreted some scriptures. For example, in the trailer there is a shot of ethereal beings coming to earth. The Christian might think that Aronofsky was portraying the nephilim in this light. However, you never see what they become in the trailer and what they do. To do so, would have cause many Christians not to see the movie Noah.
In the below snippet of the film, you will hear a golem-like being describe how ‘god’ tried to prevent these ‘beings’ from helping Adam and Eve. These beings are not the nephilim in Chapter 6. They appear to be archons (the rulers). The being who is telling the story said they were created on the second day. In the archon’s telling of the story, archons are good, God is bad. Archons gave fallen human beings knowledge that God didn’t want given to Adam and Eve’s offspring.
Also in the above trailer, you will see Noah’s father raise a flaming sword and strike the ground. From the blade, a firewall goes out from it and consumes the entire barren grassy field. However, when you watch the movie take note who is in the field. Why did Aronofsky feel it was important to leave out the special effects? Would you consider this honest marketing?
Yet Brian Houston thinks this is all fine and dandy and that only religious people will have problems with the film Noah?
There are many dishonest things we can point out in Aronofsky’s trailers in his attempt to entice Christians to watch his gnostic Noah movie. However, the one segment in the trailer that would play on the Christian’s heart-strings is when Noah turns to Tubal-Cain answers his threat with, “I am not alone” (Trailer: 1:15). The trailer blacks out to credits. The average Christian we would think would say, “Amen! Noah has put his faith in God alone! Hallelujah! Looks like a good movie to inspire my faith!” It sounds like a great reason to see Noah!
Not so fast. Did Noah say that because he had put his faith in God? Who emboldened him to stand firm in his convictions? God or something else? Watch the segment here for yourself.
If Brian Houston was fed these trailers, it may be possible to explain why he was against Christians who had issues with the film. He may have been badly duped by Aronofsky. Or Brian might have been pushing this pagan portrayal of Noah onto Christians for other reasons. We can’t read his mind on this. All we know is that he has pressured Christians into embracing the film Noah as a good film.
Gnostic Brian Houston (Part 1) What ‘Ps’ Brian Endorses Dr Brian shames
As a result of “pastors” like Brian pushing films like this on non-discerning Christians, Dr Brian Mattson wrote the following article,
THE REAL ISSUE
I had no particular interest in seeing the movie, Noah. I never originally planned to. I saw it because I needed to prep for a segment on my Web TV show with Brian Godawa (see it by clicking here) and I wanted to speak intelligently about it. I saw it, came home, wrote a review that I figured might get a decent viewership. There’s no way I expected a 2,300 word blog post to attract a ton of attention. But it’s now a lightning rod in a rather massive cultural controversy.
[By the way, please read Brian Godawa’s post today. It’s really good.]
Let me back up and recap a few things.
I saw a movie loaded with imagery and themes drawn from a variety of monistic, esoteric, mystical, and speculative religions that have their source in Neoplatonism. Among them, Kabbalah and Gnostic sects.
My critics openly admit that Aronofsky drew on a variety of these sources.
But, they seem to insist, his reliance on these sources is relatively harmless to the film, and these themes can be interpreted in healthy directions.
That’s interesting and all (and I’ll say more about it in a minute), but it isn’t the primary issue in this controversy.
The issue is this: should Christian leaders have endorsed this movie, either outright or being used as part of a Hollywood promotional machine?
Given the fact that Aronofsky drew from these types of sources, and given the themes and imagery of his final product, I say the answer is no way. Others, obviously, do not share that conclusion. I say let Aronofsky and Paramount gin up their own clientele. To me, it seems perverse for them to lean on the Christian community for it, which they did, holding private screenings for leaders and people of influence.
That, friends, is the issue. I’m not condemning or shaming anybody for seeing the film, talking about the film, debating the film, or even enjoying the film. I’m concerned that certain Christian leaders were basically asked to “vet” the film for their constituents, and they came to conclusions that simply missed the themes I’ve highlighted. I find that to be a bit of theological malpractice. Not enough to “lose your license,” be kicked out the kingdom, ostracized or condemned as a pagan or “enemy of the faith,” or anything of the sort. But enough to warrant a censure, and to be encouraged to beef up theologically and do better next time.
Now, if you want to go on to debate ways to interpret all of these themes and imagery, that’s fine. That’s partly why seeing and talking about movies is fun in the first place! Just so long as we’re clear that the Director did not get these ideas from the Bible; he got them from esoteric, mystical traditions that have as their purpose to subvert the original story.
[By the way, many people failed to grasp the rhetoric of hyperbole in my claim that it has “nothing” to do with the Bible. Obviously, all mystical re-interpretations of Noah have Genesis as their foundational source text. It’s the very thing they’re trying to subvert. I didn’t think that needed to be said. I was wrong.]
So, with my view of the major issue clear, feel free to find ways of interpreting the monistic/Gnostic/Kabbalic imagery any way you please (that’s one of the attractive features of these religions in the first place). But I’ll just note an irony: It is not me who is stretching for fancy interpretations here. That was what I expected at first with my movie review: “Boy, this guy’s really stretching. He’s crazy!” The fact that my critics are the ones searching for ways to interpret the symbolism of the texts and motifs they admit Aronofsky used means that it is not they who are on the solid ground.
But, as I say, those are all less important issues, in my view.
One final thing to clear up on the interpretive side of things. A number of people challenged my idea that God wanted to kill Noah and his family too, because Emma Watson’s character explains, “Maybe The Creator wanted you to decide” whether the human race lives or dies. Well, fine. The Creator doesn’t reveal anything about himself or his purposes in this film, so you’re certainly allowed to take her word for it. But it gets you no closer to anything resembling a biblical doctrine of God. And Christian criticsshould have had a response equally objectionable. God throws up his hands and says, “I have no opinion on the matter. You can live or die. I can go either way. You decide, Noah”? That’s not evidence of God somehow exhibiting love or mercy instead of wrath; it’s evidence of coldest of cold indifference.
And it represents pretty much the exact opposite of the Bible’s account. God chose Noah. God commissioned Noah to build the ark and, after the flood, to undertake the original Adam’s mandate to be fruitful and multiply. It was his purpose to save humanity. He didn’t leave it up to a potentially vacillating, half-homicidal Noah. So even if this interpretation of the film is right, it is still no closer to being an acceptable rendering of the biblical story.
It’s an interpretation that is not to the film’s credit.
Source: Dr Brian Mattson, The Real Issue, DrBrianMattson.com, http://drbrianmattson.com/journal/2014/4/1/just-once-more, 02/04/2014. (Accessed 01/08/2014.)
You do realise the movie is FICTION. I don’t recall seeing anywhere where the film makers claimed it was a documentary based on the Bible. Next you’ll state that The Da Vinci Code and the Constantine movie with Keanu Reeves all somehow claimed they were based on fact, when they were as fictional as The Miracle of Our Lady of Fatima.
That said, it is a very average movie with a not very good story. For a supposed prophet, the fictional Noah in the movie had very faulty reception.
Why are you still going on with this? As I stated before, Brian Houston said at Hillsong that he didn’t think it was a very good movie. After he watched a preview he was very unimpressed as it appeared he thought it would indeed be a Biblical accurate movie. It’s clearly not. So he said – you’ll like it if you’re not too religious. Everyone has moved on – except you.
Please don’t tell me The Big Bang Theory is fiction. Isn’t it a documentary about four physicists at Cal Tech and the daffy blonde who lives across the hall? Well that’s probably what you think!!
Who said this NewTaste? Brian Houston or Phil Pringle?
“You can’t help but get excited seeing the stories of the Word of God come to life in a Hollywood Epic. The makers of this film have brilliantly entertained us with their interpretation of the biblical narrative.”
Brian Houston said that.
Thanks for posting this piece.
Brian was not the only ‘Christian’ making positive statements about this piece of garbage. Others from other false movements also endorsed it…
1. Brad Lomenick – founder Catalyst Conference – *EMERGENT CHURCH
2. Erwin Raphael Mcmanus – founder Mosaic Church – *EMERGENT
3. Samuel “Sammy” Rodriguez – president NHCLC – *NAR
4. Charles Jenkins – american fake gospel scene – *WOF
5. Phil Cooke – founder Cooke Pictures, a co-founder TWC Films – *EMERGENT
~Andy
Yawn…
Wake up at the back!
Brian Houston must have said that after he’d seen the preview but before he watched the full movie. No way anyone could think it was a Christian movie after seeing it. Although I can understand the mystical Erwin McManus thinking it was supremely spiritual.
“Who said this NewTaste?
Brian Houston or Phil
Pringle?”
As if anyone in would interview Phil Pringle! Too funny!!
“Brian Houston must have said that after he’d seen the preview but before he watched the full movie.”
In the same way that he preaches as though he hasn’t read the Bible yet.
Oh i don’t know, Brian doesn’t mind stretching the truth…loves the hollywood attention…and wouldn’t you know it…bobbie houston reckons that hollywood wants to make a hillsong movie! Can you believe the luck! After brian hobnobbing with hollywood…out of the blue…someone wants to do a movie of Hillsong. In the words of ‘bobbie’ houston…..Oh My!!! How unexpected!! Oh Dear!!
@ thetruth – They’ve already made the movie – it’s called “Leap of (Hyper) Faith”
The problem with hillsong stepping up to make a movie of themselves in the movie world is that the movie world exists in the realm of make believe.
Then again, the movie world would be a perfect place for Hillsong to live in.
It is a documentary, not a Disney princess movie.
Are you sure Newtaste?
Colour Conference 2006: “We are involved in a kingdom of the spiritual realm of the supernatural and we must become the Warrior, Princess, Daughter of the King because God is reconciling ALL things in heaven and on earth to himself.”
“[…] we must become the Warrior, Princess […]”
No thoughts on this one, Newtaste? You don’t think that it does indeed sound like a Disney movie, after all?
And what’s with conflating “warrior” and “princess”? Do hillsong want to raise up an army of tiara-wearing amazons, or what?
Bobby Houston has informed us “Kingdom Women Love Sex”, so what should we expect in that department from those who have been to this particular “conference”? Will she be a dominatrix (“warrior”), or will we encounter something a little more demure (“princess”)? Do we need to toss a coin, or perhaps flick a switch?
And just why do hillsong think women need to be “warriors” in any case? Have they got a thing going for Jezebel, or is it simply the case that hillsong needs strong women because all the men there are as effete and as lost as Brian Houston?
I hope it will be in 3D…i’ll be able to see that retraction/explanation of the allah comment by brian houston. Come to think of it..i also hope to see some scenes of the ‘creative accounting’ department. Interesting that hillsong would spend, potentially, millions of dollars to see themselves on the big screen.
That’s because they are the gospel… What better thing to preach than themselves?
How about bobby houston on her instagram showing copyrighted pics of Brad Pitt and exclaiming: ” Mr “Legends of the Fall” may have been stealing hearts in ’94 — but the PRINCE OF HEAVEN was about to romance the “daughter hearts” like never before!!!! So…Bobbie…Roberta…Jesus Christ ‘romances’ His daughters? Get back to the Holy Bible..this is getting embarrassing.
I enjoyed this critique on the Noah movie…
~Andy