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The Al Mohler Crosswalk Commentary � 
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Friday, November 19, 2004

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>>  The Faith vs. the Force: The Mythology of 'Star Wars'

When Bill Moyers asked his youngest son why he had seen Star Wars at
least a dozen times, he responded: "For the same reason you have been
reading the Old Testament all your life." As Moyers explained, "He was
in a new world of myth."

That new world of myth has been a topic of debate and interest ever
since 1977, when Star Wars first warped itself into our national
consciousness.  The release of the blockbuster Star Wars trilogy on DVD
will introduce a new generation to this myth cycle that once dominated
the big screen--but will these new viewers understand the worldview
issues at stake?

Producer George Lucas  has offered different and contradictory messages
about his own agenda in the making of the Star Wars series. Explaining
the blockbusting success of the first movie, Lucas insisted that his
only purpose was to make a "fun" escapist movie, "whose only purpose was
to give pleasure."

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Nevertheless, the mythological elements in these movies are hard to
deny, and Lucas has more recently claimed a higher purpose than
entertainment in his movie making. "I see Star Wars as taking all the
issues that religion represents and trying to distill them down into a
more modern and easily accessible construct-that there is a greater
mystery out there," he told a fascinated Bill Moyers, who interviewed
Lucas for TIME.

The Moyers interview reveals a great deal about himself as well as his
subject, for both Moyers and Lucas seem absolutely agog over the power
of myth and convinced that modern secular Americans need new myths to
replace the tired old "myths" of religion, including Christianity.
"Religion is basically a container for faith. And faith in our culture .
. . what one might describe as a supernatural, or the things we can't
explain-is a very important part of what allows us to remain stable,
remain balanced."

Lucas reveals that he believes that "all religions are true," though we
cannot know who or what God is. In writing Star Wars, Lucas "had to come
up with a whole cosmology," and chose to imitate an existing belief
system rather than to invent a new religion. In the process he borrowed
freely from ancient Gnosticism, Buddhism, and certain elements of
Christianity. "I wanted to express it all," he explained.

The mythological structure of Star Wars is primarily indebted to the
Eastern religions, though Americans are more likely to recognize that
now than they were in 1977. Zen Buddhism and other Eastern philosophies
are now staples of America's polytheistic popular culture. Bookstore
sections on "Spirituality" feature hundreds of books in the "Buddhism
for the Masses" genre, and the even less serious "New Age" materials.

In the years since 1977 Americans have become primary consumers of
Eastern philosophies and ancient mythologies-dumbed down for popular
consumption and dressed up for a media age. Interest in pagan
mythologies may have peaked in the 1980s with the late Joseph Campbell's
television series (hosted by--guess who--Bill Moyers). Through books and
television series, Campbell introduced a generation of secularized and
confused Americans to the world of ancient and modern myths.

Campbell and Lucas had a mutual admiration society for several years. At
a tribute for Campbell, Lucas described him as "my Yoda," recalling a
spiritual guide from Star Wars. Campbell offered that he was "proud that
something I did helped him define his own truth."

The mythological elements in the Star Wars series became, in fact, the
justifying purpose behind a mammoth exhibition at the National Air and
Space Museum of the Smithsonian Institution, beginning in 1997. "Star
Wars: The Magic of Myth" celebrated the movie and its story of
intergalactic conflict.  The museum also sponsored a major book project
with the same title, written by the project's curator, Mary Henderson.

Identifying Star Wars as "one of the great myths of our time," Henderson
explained the power of the movies: "When the first film in the Star Wars
trilogy appeared in 1977, the ancient myths no longer seemed relevant
for many people in this culture; pressing problems absorbed our
attention, and hope itself was in short supply." Evidently, the movie
came just in time. The title of the first film--"A New Hope." It sounds
like more than a little escapism.

The book and the exhibit detailed the mythological elements in the Star
Wars movies, from the influence of Zoroastrian dualism of good and evil
to the Zen elements of "The Force." Lucas borrowed from several
different mythological traditions to create his "whole cosmology" and
pseudo-religion.

Conspicuously absent from Lucas's cosmology is anything connected to
biblical Christianity. Though oblique references to faith abound in the
film, the central religious motif is "the Force," explained by the
Smithsonian guide as a combination of "the basic principles of several
different major religions." Further, "it most embodies what all of them
have in common: an unerring faith in a spiritual power." Lucas explained
"the Force" as "a nothingness that can accomplish miracles." This is,
the Smithsonian's Henderson asserts, "reminiscent of Zen Buddhism."

"The Force" is not analogous to Christian faith, but is a form of
personal enlightenment and empowerment. Faith in "the Force" is simply
faith in mystery and some higher power-mostly within. As Lucas
instructs: "Ultimately the Force is the larger mystery of the universe.
And to trust your feelings is your way into that." The last thing
Americans need to be told is to trust their own feelings.

The mythology of Star Wars is perfectly adapted to the spiritual
confusion of postmodern America. "Go with the Force" is about all many
citizens can muster as spirituality. When Christianity ceases to be the
dominant worldview of a culture, paganism is quick to fill the void.

Some theologians have welcomed the mythological message of Star Wars as
a relief from arid secularism. Theologian Robert Jewett of
Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary went so far as to claim "a
compelling gospel in this film, one that deserves to be compared with
Paul's words in Romans." Lutheran Robert E. A. Lee claimed that "the
Force" combines "the mysticism of ESP and the New Testament doctrine of
the Holy Spirit." These folks have been sitting in the cinema too long.

Luke Skywalker and company are a form of simple escapism for many
moviegoers, and a source of spiritual "insight" for others. Christians
will be amazed at the special effects, but should be wary of any
spiritual effect. As Carl F. H. Henry reminded us all, "Judeo-Christian
revelation has nothing in common with the category of myth." We must not
confuse Christian faith with "the Force."

____________________________________

R. Albert Mohler, Jr. is president of The Southern Baptist Theological
Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky.  For more articles and resources by
Dr. Mohler, and for information on The Albert Mohler Program, a daily
national radio program broadcast on the Salem Radio Network, go to
www.albertmohler.com.  For information on The Southern Baptist
Theological Seminary, go to www.sbts.edu.  Send feedback to
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