Entertaining Faith  blog
   
Aronofsky’s ‘Noah’ and whitewashing the  Scriptures
_Laura  Turner_ (http://lauraturner.religionnews.com/author/lauraturner/)  
_Follow @lkoturner_ (https://twitter.com/lkoturner)  | Feb 19, 2014
 
It’s a good thing stories of drunkenness, incest, adultery, and bizarre 
tales  of _bears killing children for making fun of a bald prophet_ 
(https://bible.org/seriespage/elisha-and-two-bears-2-kings-223-25)  never  made 
it into 
the Bible. Can you imagine what a mess that would be? I, for one,  am glad 
for this whitewashed and easy-to-interpret book. 
Darren Aronofsky (director of such lighthearted family fare as Black  Swan, 
Pi, and Requiem for a Dream) is working  on a new film about the Biblical 
character of Noah. You remember Noah — he was  the guy who turned away the 
unicorns from the ark because they were late. He had  a long beard and a brown 
robe and a friendly smile, kind of like Russell Crowe,  who plays Noah in 
the film. 
Paramount, nervous about how faith-based audiences would respond to the 
film  (set to be released March 28), held test screenings with Christian 
audiences.  _The Hollywood Reporter_ 
(http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/rough-seas-noah-darren-aronofsky-679315) 
 wrote about the audience  reaction: 
“Friction grew when a segment of the recruited Christian viewers, among 
whom  the studio had hoped to find Noah‘s most enthusiastic fans,  questioned 
the film’s adherence to the Bible story and reacted negatively to the  
intensity and darkness of the lead character. Aronofsky’s Noah gets drunk, for  
example, and considers taking drastic measures to eradicate mankind from the  
planet.” 
And therein lies the problem. When we expect  whitewashed versions of what 
is actually in the Bible, we will be sorely  disappointed by the real thing. 
In case it’s been a while since you’ve read  Genesis 9, take a moment to 
refresh your memory of what the Bible says about  Noah: 
“Noah, a man of the soil, was the first to plant a  vineyard. He drank some 
of the wine and became drunk, and he lay uncovered in  his tent. And Ham, 
the father of Canaan, saw the nakedness of his father, and  told his two 
brothers…when Noah awoke from his wine and knew what his youngest  son had done 
to him, he said, “Cursed be Canaan; lowest of slaves shall he be to  his 
brothers.” 
(Not incidentally, this passage was used by  Christians in the antebellum 
south for decades, if not centuries,_ to  justify slavery_ 
(http://fontes.lstc.edu/~rklein/Documents/honor.htm) .) 
So Noah got drunk and cursed his son for failing to  honor his privacy and 
dignity. Noah was also “a righteous man, blameless in his  generation; Noah 
walked with God.” (Genesis 6:9) This is the mystery of the  Scriptures: both 
of these things are somehow true. Noah was righteous and he got  super 
drunk and laid naked in his tent. As Rebecca Cusey _wrote_ 
(http://www.patheos.com/blogs/tinseltalk/2014/02/duck-dynasty-christian-marketing-and-noah-christi
ans-should-be-better/)  at Patheos, “If you associate the story of Noah  
with adorable animals smiling under a sunny rainbow, you’re reading the story  
wrong.” 
One of my own early forays into  understanding the origins of the world 
came about when my Old Testament  professor at my (wonderful, very Christian) 
college mentioned how many Ancient  Near Eastern origin accounts — some of 
which predated Genesis — had some kind of  flood narrative as their starting 
point. The epic of _Gilgamesh_ 
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gilgamesh_flood_myth) , for example, in which the 
god Ea  commanded Utnapishtim to build a 
ship to survive the flood. 
There is a great deal to struggle with in these  early texts, and a great 
deal that is hard to understand. What we need to  remember is to take the 
Scriptures for what they are without imposing some sort  of Disney filter to 
them. Noah may not be the film you want  to take your young children to see, 
and that’s no problem. But let’s not pretend  that the Bible is all nice 
people and happy endings. We who call ourselves  religious, of all people, 
should know better.

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