First of all, I got saved at Vacation Bible School around 1980-81.... known and loved God all my life. I could tell you story after story of how He's loved and saved me. Second, this movie, above all else, just shows people experiencing that same love and joy. You could feel the family of God around you in the theatre quietly lifting up their hearts in praise as they were seeing their own stories shown on screen.
This is not another cheesy hybrid Hallmark Christian film. It's beautifully done and probably the best movie I've ever seen.
Many hearts will be touched by the simple message. I kept waiting for Hollywood's message of SELF as God to creep in, but it didn't. Just an amazing film. Light, funny at times, and very uplifting.
Great reply!
I agree, interesting topics. To me, "being saved" means getting as much of one's real and healthy self back as possible. It means being in touch with one's feelings and being free, to the extent one can be, from repression of feeling and the negative consequences of repression. It means knowing and feeling the importance of kindness to others, of connection with others, and where necessary working to put healthy behavior into practice despite any habits and defenses to the contrary.
I don't know if there's anything more to it than that; I never believed in the supernatural aspects of religion and don't feel any need for "life after death" or anything else; this life is what we have, and it IS a miracle. I'm open to the possibility of something else but don't yet see it; my lack / my loss, perhaps.
As to the significance of Jesus: He put the importance of love out there in plain language and in His own humble, courageous, and remarkable actions -- and captured the attention and devotion of millions for two thousand years now. In a world of violence, emotional pain, hardship, and ignorance, Jesus has kept the idea of LOVE and of a compassionate, healthy world alive in people's hearts even as they struggle to understand it. If a person has experienced very little love in their life and has enough repression to be out of touch with their deepest feelings, what can that person actually hear when someone speaks to them of love?
One cannot truly know what one has never experienced. THAT is why two thousand years of Christianity has had such patchy success at bringing love into the world. Not NO success, but far less than one could hope.
-- I'll forgo more detail right now since part 2 of my earlier comment, which I'm here to post, is already over-long and still only a portion of what I've written. Here goes:
Yes.
Think of a puppy, or a healthy young child. LOVE is the default; they don't need to be TAUGHT to feel love or to express it; love is the most natural thing in the world, like breathing. Love from a child (or a puppy) encourages a positive, loving response back from others -- assuming those others are emotionally healthy enough to respond in a healthy manner.
In the violent, blood-thirsty natural world of predators, parasites, and diseases, LOVE is the gift -- to other animals, but particularly to humans -- that protects life and perhaps more importantly, makes life worth living.
I'll talk about psychopaths (people with particular brain damage or lack of function) later. But aside from that small percentage of people, LOVE -- true love, as you put it -- is, once again, the default. ONLY trauma (beatings or other cruelty, emotional coldness, or other traumatic pain) can lead a healthy young child into what you are calling (if I read you correctly) false love. THAT is why Jesus made the point about not offending children so strongly. Trauma leads to repression and to physical and emotional defenses -- an infinite spectrum of them -- which cause harm to the traumatized person (alcohol, tobacco, and drug use, high blood pressure, suicide, etc) and to others -- physical or emotional cruelty, outright violence, lies, and so on.
The bad news is that nearly all of us have SOME repressed early trauma that blunts, to some degree, our openness to feeling and thus our ability to fully experience love. Most of us also have repressed anger as well as hurt (anger is a defense against pain, as well as a survival tool against threats in the environment), which works against our openness to love even more actively. And LOVE isn't the only thing damaged by early trauma.
The ACE Study (cohort of ~ 17,000 adults) shows what this actually means in the real world.
A short look at the Study: https://www.urmc.rochester.edu/MediaLibraries/URMCMedia/pediatrics/training/plc/documents/PLC_10-ACE-Study-Handout-MSL-5-2014.pdf
To partially convey the impact of early trauma, here's a longish excerpt from https://tatlife.com/the-adverse-childhood-experiences-study-the-largest-most-important-public-health-study-you-never-heard-of-began-in-an-obesity-clinic/ --
I'll say this: Jesus' teachings on how to treat children are rarely given anywhere near enough attention.
By far the most important thing we can do to encourage emotional health in people is to provide love early in life to each new generation -- from conception on. A healthy pregnancy, a safe and gentle birth, a loving childhood with plenty of social contact to help learn respect for others naturally, etc. FIXING emotional damage later is much harder and never completely effective.
More another day --