Columbia Faith & Values

Culture » Entertainment & Pop Culture

COMMENTARY: Gospel lessons from ‘Downton Abbey’

(RNS) I got home from a church event on Sunday evening, in time to watch the season three finale of “Downton Abbey” on PBS, but I stuck to my guns about catching up on previous episodes first.

Show Caption |

In the Servants’ Hall with Joanne Froggatt as Anna, Rob James-Collier as Thomas, Phyllis Logan as Mrs Hughes, Jim Carter as Carson, Siobhan Finneran as Sarah O’Brien, Kevin Doyle as Molesley. Credit: RNS photo courtesy of © Carnival Film & Television Limited 2012 for MASTERPIECE.

But on Monday morning, The New York Times had two articles about the finale and I couldn’t stop myself from reading them.

So now I know that two key characters get killed off — because the actors playing them wanted to move on from the show. Does that mean watching the older season three episodes is pointless? Not at all. As any Christian can tell you, knowing how the story ends doesn’t take away its meaning or mystery. If anything, you become even more alert to character development.

Killing off characters can work wonders for a television series, but it rarely works for the actors who overestimated what they uniquely brought to the program.

Ask any executive, pastor or educator about moving on and then bombing in the next job: their success wasn’t about them in the first place. It was circumstance, luck or an “alignment of the planets,” if you will, that existed only for an instant.

Maybe this reality explains why Christianity has been such a flawed enterprise. Think about it. Virtually nothing of what Jesus intended has come to pass. His followers aren’t one, they aren’t even nice. Humankind has neither learned to love God or neighbor, to make peace, or to proclaim the good news of salvation in any way deeper than institutional arrogance. Nor have we learned to be bold in justice, magnanimous in healing, generous with wealth, or welcoming of outcasts.

Every now and then, people who know the end of Jesus’ story, go back and discover how the end came about. They read what Jesus actually did and what he actually said. They see themselves, not as the keepers of a proud institution, but as pilgrims and disciples walking with the Jesus who was.

That way is both terrifying and exhilarating, both humbling and joyful. The journey takes one profoundly out of step, often into the wilderness that Jesus experienced, away from the known and into villages where the needs of this world come pressing around one’s door.

Pilgrims and disciples look especially at what Jesus’ debut season was intended to produce as the story unfolded. They don’t look for the proud and prickly institutions our ancestors created and we perpetuate, not the more than 40,000 denominations that joust for attention and funds, each one convinced of its superiority. But they look for a transformed humanity that’s capable of resisting evil, speaking truth to power, treasuring humankind in all its forms and making daily life a better reflection of God’s life.

Those discoveries or awakenings can become amazing moments. They can change the world. But they always require that there be a new season, not a continuous replication of earlier seasons.

I believe God has brought us to a new season. We know how the original season ended and how the seasons that followed fell apart. We can’t replicate the original season. But we can ask how Jesus died and what his death says about how he lived, and what does how he lived say about our lives and our world?

It’s time for a new script, written and directed by an author who knows more and loves more than we do.

(Tom Ehrich is a writer, church consultant and Episcopal priest based in New York. He is the author of “Just Wondering, Jesus” and founder of the Church Wellness Project. His website is www.morningwalkmedia.com. Follow Tom on Twitter @tomehrich.)

Topics: Culture, Entertainment & Pop Culture
Beliefs: Christian - Protestant/Other
Tags: downton abbey, entertainment, show, television

You must acquire rights to repost our content. Log in now for permission to download and reprint or repost this article.

Comments

Add Your Comment

The yellow duck is what colour?

Related Stories

Restoring the joy of servanthood – a lesson from ‘Downton Abbey’

The Mayers have been bit by the "Downton Abbey" bug. If you're fascinated by how human beings love, hate, plot, bicker and make amends – all in a British-American period drama television show context – you may be captivated, too. And amid the amusement, there are lessons to learn. 
More | Comments (0)

American Idol(atry)

Admit it: You like reality television, too. But wait a second – we're being entertained by others' flaws? Others' pain? Is this really what we should be entertaining ourselves with? 
More | Comments (1)

Is God the missing character in ‘Downton Abbey’?

The third season of the megahit PBS series "Downton Abbey" wraps up on Sunday, capping another must-see run of ruin and redemption at Lord Grantham's stately English manor. Yet some are still left puzzled over the absence of what should be a leading Upstairs player in this colorful cast: God.
More | Comments (0)

For Hollywood couple, “The Bible” miniseries is a ‘labor of love’

LOS ANGELES (RNS) Roma Downey and Mark Burnett met in a nail salon in what she says was love at first sight. But the high-powered Hollywood couple say their most important project isn’t her work on ”Touched by an Angel” or his role on ”Survivor” but their joint History Channel multi-part documentary on “The Bible.” 
More | Comments (0)

Can a Christian watch ‘Game of Thrones’?

(RNS) Is there anything morally redeeming about “Game of Thrones”? Does the hit HBO series even have a moral vision?
More | Comments (5)

Sign In



Forgot Password?

You also can sign in with Facebook or Twitter if you've connected your account to them.

Sign In Using Facebook

Sign In Using Twitter