Billy,

I am wondering if the entertainment value of the film makes attendance 
worthwhile, despite the obvious stretch beyond the limited amount of actual 
biblical data available.

Chris

 

 

From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of [email protected]
Sent: Friday, April 04, 2014 9:20 AM
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: [RC] Noah and the Deluge

 

 

 

Valuable review of the new movie about Noah and the Deluge.

However, from my perspective the film completely misses the point

inasmuch as the original Flood stories predate the Biblical account by

at least 1000 years and are all Sumerian / Mesopotamian.

The easiest to access is the version found in the Epic of Gilgamesh.

The version in Genesis has its charm but nothing can replace

the originals.

 

Billy

 

 

-----------------------------------

 

Deseret News

April 3, 2014

Jeff Bradshaw


A Noah like no other before: A look at the latest biblical film from an LDS 
perspective


 

When Cecil B. DeMille’s movie epic "The Ten Commandments" was released in 1956, 
the opening credits proclaimed: “Those who see this motion picture … will make 
a pilgrimage over the very ground that Moses trod more than 3,000 years ago ... 
in accordance with the ancient texts of Philo, Josephus, Eusebius, the Midrash 
and the Holy Scriptures.”

While not explicitly identifying his sources, director Darren Aronofsky seems 
to have done something similar in his new movie "Noah" by silently weaving 
Jewish traditions from outside the Bible into scripture and the threads of his 
own imagination to produce a film version of Noah like no other.

Close encounters of the pseudepigraphal kind

The Jewish traditions from outside the Bible that appear to have influenced 
Aronofsky are of two main sorts: 1. pseudepigrapha, writings that attained 
their current form between about 200 B.C. and A.D. 200 but that usually claim 
authority from Old Testament figures living much earlier (e.g., Enoch, Abraham, 
Moses); and 2. midrash, later compilations of scripture commentary by Jewish 
rabbinic sages.

Scholars differ in their opinions about the value of pseudepigraphal and 
midrashic literature. However, some believe that authentic traditions as old as 
those found in the Bible may be preserved in such manuscripts, mixed with other 
material of lesser worth. Thus, it is not unthinkable that Aronofsky could draw 
from some of these traditions in the film. Let’s explore a few examples.

After brief reminders of mankind’s seemingly inevitable propensity for evil 
(the temptation in Eden, the murder of Abel), the film segues to the violent 
death of Noah’s father, Lamech, at the hand of the ruthless earth-waster 
Tubal-Cain. This provides a first example of the twists to tradition because 
the older stories depict a (different) Lamech who kills Tubal-Cain rather than 
the reverse (see Genesis 4:22-23; Moses 5:47-50; Midrash Tanhuma-Yellamedenu, 
Bereshit, 11).

In another example that recalls the flood dreams of the wicked in Jewish 
tradition (e.g., Midrash of Shemahzai and Aza’el; Book of the Giants), Noah is 
informed about the deluge not by the voice of God but through a series of 
apocalyptic nightmares. As Noah’s family builds the ark, they are protected by 
repentant “Watchers,” shadowy characters of legend that are here depicted as 
gigantic spirits encased in stone for their wickedness (see, e.g., 1 Enoch 
6-16, 85-88, 106; Jubilees 4:15, 5:1-2; Midrash of Shemahzai and Aza’el).

In 1 Enoch 106-107, Methuselah travels to the “ends of the earth” to counsel 
with Enoch about the birth of Noah. The film converts that story into a visit 
by Noah to his grandfather Methuselah, an eccentric cave-dwelling shaman with 
potions, magic seeds and healing power.

Of course, even lavish interpretation of Jewish tradition does not prevent 
Aronofsky from the exercise of pure cinematic license, adding fanciful elements 
directly from his own imagination. For example, we are shown a forest that 
springs up from a magic seed to provide timber for the ark. We also witness the 
marvelous effects of a smoky concoction that handily puts the animals to sleep 
for the duration of the sea voyage. (By way of contrast with the script of the 
film, we read in midrash that Noah and his family did not sleep a wink on the 
ark because all their time was spent caring for and feeding the animals.)

There are certain motifs from ancient sources present in "Noah." For instance, 
in a scene that has left many viewers and reviewers scratching their heads, 
Tubal-Cain deprives Lamech of a sacred birthright heirloom in the form of a 
snakeskin. Later, Ham takes it from Tubal-Cain. Students of midrash will 
recognize this as a variation on the story of the stolen garment — a gift from 
God to Adam, and an object of envy for the jealous Satan. This same garment was 
said to have been handed down to Noah, stolen by Ham, inherited by Nimrod, 
taken by Esau and put on by Jacob in order to obtain Isaac’s blessing (e.g., 
Midrash Rabbah 4:8; Midrash Tanhuma 1:24; Pirke d’ Rabbi Eliezer, 24). 
Traditions diverge on the animal that was the source of the skins, naming 
dozens of species the hide of which could have been used. "Noah" settles on a 
snakeskin, poetic revenge on the beast that incited Adam and Eve’s 
transgression (e.g., Pirke d’ Rabbi Eliezer, 20; Targum Pseudo-Jonathan of 
Genesis, 3:21).

One ancient allusion that will catch the attention of sharp-eyed LDS viewers is 
Tubal-Cain’s relentless quest to amass wealth through the mining of a luminous 
mineral called "tsohar." The meaning of this obscure term is debated, but some 
readers interpret tsohar as a reference to a shining stone that was said to 
have hung from the rafters of the ark in order to provide light (see, e.g., 
Midrash Rabbah of Genesis, 31:11; Pirke d’ Rabbi Eliezer, 23). Readers of the 
Book of Mormon will not miss the similarity to the story of the shining stones 
the brother of Jared obtained to provide light for his barges (Ether 3:1-6, 
6:3).

The greatest story never told

In contrast to the Bible’s version of Noah’s pre-flood career as a 
long-suffering “preacher of righteousness” (see Moses 6:23, 8:19-25), 
Aronofsky’s Noah quickly dismisses hopes of redemption for the wicked. 
Resembling a frontier sheriff in a classic Western, Noah’s single sermon is 
short and unsweet: “There is no escape for you and your kind. Your time is 
done.”

Genesis tells us about Noah, a man who was “perfect in his generations” 
(Genesis 6:9) and who, like Enoch, “walked with God” (Genesis 5:24, 6:9). 
Aronofsky tells us about a more ordinary Noah, the last of the good guys, who 
must perform an impossible task that results in great pain for members of his 
own family.

The mainspring of Aronofsky's plot is driven by the introduction of a 
non-biblical element into the storyline. In short: Noah decides to execute a 
just and final solution to the problem of the world’s violence and corruption 
by deliberately making sure that the line of humanity will end with his 
immediate family (Shem marries a wife who cannot conceive; Ham’s intended bride 
is deliberately left behind by Noah; Japheth is never given a chance to marry). 
It is from this knotty problem, designed from scratch by Aronofsky, that the 
primary chain of story logic unfolds, leading inexorably to a final denouement.

God, or “The Creator” as he is always called, is distant in "Noah." He is seen 
only through what he does. He gives Noah apocalyptic nightmares. He makes the 
flood storm and later, we are led to assume, supervises the display of a 
surreal rainbow.

However, in contrast to the Bible, Aronofsky's "Noah" forbids God to speak for 
himself; he speaks only through others. For example, although Noah’s sons say 
little of consequence to their father (except to signal obedience or defiance), 
Aronofsky's depiction allows qualities of innate goodness to shine through the 
words of the women in Noah’s life — his wife, his daughter-in-law, his twin 
granddaughters and even the potential daughter-in-law he left behind to die. 
Their strong voices eventually persuade Noah to temper his passion for 
“justice” with the unstrained quality of “mercy.”

At a moment of self-doubt, Noah cries out to God, in the single prayer shown, 
“Why do you not answer me? Why?” And though, in the aftermath of that 
experience, Noah’s resolve to do what he thinks he must is strengthened, there 
is no visual sign of enlightenment on his face, no “windows of heaven” moment 
to indicate that Noah received an answer. Indeed, viewers are eventually led to 
conclude that for most of the movie, Noah was completely mistaken about God’s 
intentions for humanity.

Because God does not speak in the film, he cannot give commandments. Thus, it 
is Noah, not God, who must do the speaking at the renewal of the commandment to 
Adam and Eve: “Be fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the earth” (contrast 
Genesis 9:1). In the Bible, Noah performs the priestly ordinance of animal 
sacrifice not just once, but multiple times, laying “every clean beast” and 
“every clean fowl” upon the altar (Genesis 8:20). Such a scene would be 
unthinkable for this movie. In the film, the rainbow, which God established as 
a “token of the covenant” he made with Noah and his posterity (Genesis 9:12), 
becomes nothing more than a vague hint of benediction from the far-off sky 
after Noah reconciles with his family.

Borrowing the words of Eugen Drewermann from another context, we might say of 
Aronofsky’s "Noah" that “every religious symbol, especially those having to do 
with eternity, immortality and the survival of love, becomes nothing more than 
nostalgic memories of lost hope ... too weak to call forth the reality it 
evokes.”

Noah’s guilt or glory?

Genesis 9 tells the story of Noah’s planting of a vineyard and his drinking of 
the wine made from it. An odd inconsistency can be interpreted from the Bible 
in way of Noah’s seeming portrayal as a saint before the flood and as an 
inebriated vintner afterward. What aspects of this enigmatic portrayal are the 
result of divergent traditions, textual misunderstandings or the abbreviated 
nature of the account is difficult to ascertain. But some scholars have 
described the perceived inconsistency as part of a deliberate effort by ancient 
religious sectarians to denigrate the character of Noah.

The film explains Noah’s behavior after the flood in terms of “survivor’s 
guilt” and shame for his failures — though there is no hint of this in the 
Bible. Noah, we are told in the official movie novelization, “drank to forget. 
His thoughts were nothing but darkness, and his heart was heavy with shame and 
regret and sorrow ... Now he had lost everything.”

Had Aronofsky read a little deeper into Jewish tradition, he might have 
encountered ancient sources suggesting the possibility that this episode 
instead describes the crowning blessing of Noah’s life, a fitting reward for a 
life of faithfulness.

In this regard, it is significant that other flood accounts from the ancient 
Near East describe the climax of the story as being the founding of a temple 
over the source of the floodwaters, an idea hinted at in Jewish sources (Zohar, 
Noah 1:73b; compare Lekh Lekha 1:80a, 184a). Moreover, some versions of the 
story go on to suggest that Noah’s drinking of the wine should be seen as a 
ritual preparation for his receiving the highest ordinances of the priesthood, 
and not merely as a spontaneous indulgence that occurred at the end of a 
particularly wearying day (e.g., Genesis Apocryphon 12:17; Jubilees 7:2; 
compare JST Genesis 14:25-40; Testament of Levi 8:4-6).

Consistent with this interpretation, Joseph Smith is remembered as saying that 
Noah “was not drunk but in a vision” (Diary of C. L. Walker, 12 May 1881), an 
idea echoed in the Genesis Apocryphon (13:8-15:20). Modern scholars Y. Koler 
and Frederick E. Greenspahn concur with this idea, concluding that Ham’s sin 
was in “looking directly at God (while Noah was) in the course of revelation.” 
Fittingly, Shem, who did not look, was afterward given a blessing to enjoy the 
immediate presence of the Lord, like his father had just experienced: “(M)ay 
the Glory of His Shekhinah (God’s presence) dwell in the midst of the tents of 
Shem” (Targum Neofiti 9:27).

'Should I see the movie?'

Though I can’t recommend this movie, I don’t think there is too much harm in it 
— so long as the viewer doesn't confuse it with the story in the Bible. The 
cinematography, acting and special effects are outstanding. Though flawed in 
its conception and execution, the movie is not deliberately disrespectful in 
its intent. There is a certain morality in the film, though it never rises 
above an earthly level to provide a view from heaven. When the story concludes, 
there is more bleakness than blessedness in the atmosphere.

In 1962, President David O. McKay responded to noisy complaints about the U.S. 
Supreme Court’s decision that barred the recital of government-written prayers 
in public schools as follows: “The real tragedy ... is not that we have 
permitted the Bible to slip out of our public schools, but that we have so 
openly neglected to teach it in either the home or the Church” (Relief Society 
Magazine, December 1962, p. 879). President McKay’s comment applies with even 
more force today. As a constructive response to this neglect, we can reread the 
sophisticated and spiritually sensitive stories of Genesis — slowly and 
carefully — to find out what the Creator intended us to learn from them.

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