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Written Word > Articles & Commentaries > May 2010 > The Dangerous Silliness of "Agora"
Current rating: 4.6 (14 ratings)


The Dangerous Silliness of “Agora”

By Rev. Robert Barron / from Catholic New World

Here we go again. I just saw the new film “Agora,” which is a re-telling of the story of Hypatia, the brilliant woman philosopher from Alexandria, who was killed, supposedly by a mob of “Christians,” in the year 415. Along with the tales of Galileo and Giordano Bruno, the legend of Hypatia is a favorite of anti-religious ideologues. I first heard the story from Carl Sagan, the popular scientist whose multi-part program “Cosmos” was widely watched back in the 1970’s. “Cosmos” in fact comes to its climax with Sagan’s melodramatic rehearsal of the narrative. Hypatia, he explained, was a scientist and philosopher who ran afoul of Cyril, the wicked bishop of Alexandria, who then stirred up a mob of his superstitious followers who subsequently put Hypatia to death. Sagan commented: “the supreme tragedy was that when the Christians came to burn down the great library of Alexandria, there was no one to stop them.” And just to rub it in, he said, “and they made Cyril a saint.” Sagan’s account found its roots in Edward Gibbon’s version of the story in his deeply anti-Christian classic The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. In fact, Gibbon was the first to link the murder of Hypatia with the burning down of the Alexandrian library. Alejandro Amenabar’s new film stands firmly in the Gibbon/Sagan tradition, presenting Hypatia as a saint of secular rationalism who desperately gathers scrolls from the library before it is invaded by hysterical Christians and who goes nobly to her death, defending reason and science against the avatars of religious superstition.

Well, Hypatia was indeed a philosopher and she was indeed killed by a mob in 415, but practically everything else about the story that Gibbon and Sagan and Amenabar tell is false. For the complete de-bunking of the myth, take a look at David Hart Bentley’s book Atheist Delusions, but allow me to share just a few details. The library of Alexandria was burnt to the ground, not by Christian mobs in the fifth century, but by Julius Caesar’s troops, some forty years before Jesus was born. A temple to the god Serapis, called the Sarapeon, was built on the site of the ancient library (and there might have been some scrolls in it in the fifth century), and it was this building that was sacked by angry Christians in Hypatia’s time, in response to pagan defilements of Christian houses of worship. Now mind you, I’m not excusing any of this for a moment. Whenever Christians respond to such attacks with violence, they are opposing themselves to the one who said, “love your enemies” and “turn the other cheek.” But I am indeed insisting that the charge that Christians mindlessly and gleefully destroyed the greatest center of learning in the ancient world is a calumny.

More to it, Hypatia, sadly enough, found herself caught in the middle of a struggle between two powerful figures in Alexandria, namely, Orestes the civil authority and Cyril the bishop. She was most likely killed in retaliation for the murder of some of Cyril’s supporters by agents of Orestes. Again, all of this is nasty stuff, and I’m not trying to exculpate anyone, but to pitch this largely political story as a battle between sweet reason and vicious religious superstition is misleading to say the very least. Finally, though the film portrays her largely as an astronomer (probably to compel comparisons with Galileo), Hypatia was best known as a neo-Platonist philosopher, a devotee of Plato and Plotinus. Not only were there Christians in Hypatia’s classes, not only were Christian bishops among her circle of friends, but Christian theologians—Augustine, Ambrose, and Origen, just to name the most prominent—were enthusiastic advocates of neo-Platonism. Therefore, to portray her as the noble champion of reason over and against mouth-breathing Christian primitives is just ridiculous.

But none of this gets to the heart of why I object to “Agora.” In one of the most visually arresting scenes in the film, Amenabar brings his camera up to a very high point of vantage overlooking the Alexandria library while it is being ransacked by the Christian mob. From this perspective, the Christians look for all the world like scurrying cockroaches. In another memorable scene, the director shows a group of Christian thugs carting away the mangled corpses of Jews whom they have just put to death, and he composes the shot in such a way that the piled bodies vividly call to mind the bodies of the dead in photographs of Dachau and Auschwitz. The not so subtle implication of all of this is that Christians are dangerous types, threats to civilization, and that they should, like pests, be eliminated. I wonder if it ever occurred to Amenabar that his movie might incite violence against religious people, especially Christians, and that precisely his manner of critique was used by some of the most vicious persecutors of Christianity in the last century. My very real fear is that the meanness, half-truths, and outright slanders in such books as Christopher Hitchens’s God is Not Great and Richard Dawkins’s The God Delusion have begun to work their way into the popular culture.

We Christians have to resist—and keep setting the record straight.

Posted: 5/10/2010 4:21:49 PM by Word On Fire Admin | with 15 comments
Filed under: Agora


Comments
Robert Morron
True that, *****. Spread the word of God with righteousness!
5/14/2010 1:33:07 AM
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Robert Morron
True that, *****. Spread the word of God with righteousness!
5/14/2010 1:33:40 AM
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Ismael
"My very real fear is that the meanness, half-truths, and outright slanders in such books as Christopher Hitchens’s God is Not Great and Richard Dawkins’s The God Delusion have begun to work their way into the popular culture. "

I think this is not just a 'fear' anymore but a sad truth.

Although Hitchens and Dawkins spoke and wrote nonsense, we seen now the rotten fruits they have procuced.

Also, if I am not mistaken, Cyril of Alexandria was an admired of Hypatia as the philosopher she was.
5/16/2010 9:21:56 PM
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Dante
Thanks for this review!
5/19/2010 6:01:49 AM
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tmromo
Perhaps someone can make a quick edit to this post. The Enlightenment historian in question is Edward Gibbon not Edward Gibbons.
5/19/2010 12:59:17 PM
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Brian
P.S. In my previous post, I made a mistake in recounting my ventures in commenting on Franco's regime. I wasn't called a Communist--rather, I was accused of relying on and parroting Communists.
5/20/2010 11:08:08 AM
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Brian
Please excuse me. What happened to my previous post? It was a longer post in which I credited Father Barron for acknowledging the crimes of some Christians, talked about how Spaniards have logically reacted to Franco's National Catholicism, and noted how the film's director seems to promote the eliminationism that liberals rightly decry. Did something go wrong with the posting?
5/20/2010 6:29:29 PM
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TMJC
I saw this film last September when it was screened for the first time at the Toronto International Film Festival. I had read a little about the film before seeing it, and I had great reservations sitting down amongst all of the other festival patrons. I knew how this screening was going to end.

Alejandro Amenabar gave a little speech before the film started. He said that this film was not a film that meant to demonize religion (at which point I wanted to stand up and say to him, "You mean Christianity, but I don't know how you are saying that with a straight face!" He said that this was a film about courage and the eternal search for truth. I could only roll my eyes because I really DID know what was coming.

And I was not disappointed.

My concern with films like this is that the directors and producers seem not to understand that the majority of movie-goers today take movies based on historical events and personages to be actual factual history lessons. I am a college professor, and I am constantly reading and hearing comments by students that are formed by "facts" that they pick up in films. It is disheartening and frightening. And the same thing happened after this film. The lights went up and the comments from the audience were:

"Can you believe that actually happened?"

"It is sad to think of so great a woman being destroyed by a bunch of religious maniacs."

"Christians ruined the world."

Amenabar told the audience that the film was about courage and the eternal search for truth that must never be quelled. It was frightening and disheartening that he actually believed his own words.
5/24/2010 1:29:28 PM
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Brian
Let me see if I can reconstruct my post.

I want to start by thanking Father Barron for acknowledging that some Christians have promoted brutality in the name of truth. Elizabeth Lev's review seemed to completely sweep such realities under the rug, dismissing them as "alleged" and "stereotypes". Such dismissal strike me as irresponsible.

I'd also like to offer a suggestion that Fransisco Franco's regime did much to repulse many Spaniards from the Mother Church. It's no secret that he constantly boasted of promoting the Catholic Faith while acting very much like the dictator he was. Firing Squads and Mass graves were involved. I've tried to point out those facts and draw the common-sense conclusion on other Catholic cites, only to be accused of parroting Communists. I originally mistakenly typed that I was accused of being a Communist.

Finally, the imagery that Barron describes does seem eliminationist--smacking of the eliminationism that liberal bloggers have rightly denounced. For all the good work that David Neiwert has done in raising the issue of eliminationism, I know that he, as a liberal, won't get around to addressing anti-Catholic eliminationism.
5/29/2010 7:55:44 AM
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Kevin Landry
This critique is "helpful" somewhat but it is time to put a lot more energy and funding behind lay Catholic writers and producers who can make a difference, too shall we? It's time to be a lot less "wise as serpents" in telling people how bad other's are in their productions and become "harmless as doves" in the form of productions we make without of course remaining so fruitless as we do in the way of encouraging and supporting the talented lay writer and producer!!!
6/8/2010 7:14:02 AM
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tlh
Father Barron has ever been very fair and just when making comments about the fact that some Christians in different periods of history have committed some really horrible acts. This is the attitude most mature Christians should take.

Although I'm not really surprised that this movie he's reviewing took this "Christian bashing" attitude. It's the way of 90% of the movies out there that deal with religious themes, unfortunately.
6/18/2010 2:55:15 PM
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moonbeam728
thank goodness someone with a brain who understands truth and striving for the higher ideal is out there to rebut the idiocy from the majority of movie makers, news reporters and the politicians. thanks also for striving for the higher ideal and using the talents God gave to you to assist us on the 'narrow path'.
6/19/2010 5:35:12 PM
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michael jaffray king
I want to say Thank you God for raising up Father B to be able to respond to the lies of the enemies of the Truth. "The Splendour of Truth!" I like that name from EWTN!
We are bound to have enemies who will write lies as there is a very real enemy in Satan the deceiver.
Back to my favourite verse of scripture. Some of you must be getting tired of hearing this one, then maybe not. Saint Matthew Ch16 verse 18 And I say to you: That you are Peter; and upon this rock I will build my church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it.
The Richard Dawkins and the Christopher Hitchens of this world will soon be gone. Their beam of darkness will soon be wiped out but Jesus and His Church which He is Building and maintaining down the centuries. Mother Church will stand firm in spite of attacks from without and from those sad ones from within.
The gates of Hell are no match for Catholicism. God is raising up His modern day Elijahs and Elishas and 21st century saints. We have nothing to fear. We should pray though and never give up praying for those strongly deluded people our enemies like those mentioned above and in Father B's post.
God bless you Father B and He is and he will continue to do so. We must all pray for you that you keep up the good fight right till your very end. I am sure you will!
7/11/2010 11:35:45 AM
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Cam
Enemies of truth? That would be religion.

That movie is historical with regard to the main themes. The director did make some "assumptions" that were minor. You can read Dr. Richard Carrier's critique of the movie.
10/7/2010 1:25:18 PM
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childrens bible lessons
You definitely have done your research and know what exactly to get and from where? I would have found the first story believable because all said and done there was a lot of religious persecution of the learned especially scientists who were believed to be the ones who were working against religion. But I think you have given some substantial evidence which disproves what is written in the Gibbs book. I hope that there are other such misconceptions cleared with evidence!
2/1/2011 11:07:05 PM
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