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The Shack: The Good, The Bad, and the Heresy

Posted on March 6, 2017

A man returns to a small shack in the mountains where his daughter was abducted and
murdered years ago. While there, he meets with God and learns to cope with the evil of his
daughters suffering in light of the goodness of God.

The Good

This is a film in the vein of Miracles from Heaven and Heaven is for Real, a well made, well-
told Hollywood attempt to penetrate the faith-based market. I have to say right up front,
that I had read the book and was quite dubious going in. The book was certainly less than
orthodox in its understanding of God, even unbiblical at times.

But as it turns out, apparently, the producers and Lionsgate, learned a bit of a lesson from past
Biblical movies by pagans and atheists, that maybe they should have some real Christian
influence on a product for that audience. I could tell that there must have been some
Christians involved in the development of this story that desperately tried to keep it inline
with that demographic.

For that, I applaud the filmmakers.

This story tackles THE most important struggle in the human experience: If God is good, why
does he allow evil and suffering? And it does so with some rather powerful moments of truth
worthy of the best of Christian apologetics (the defense of the Faith).

The first half of the movie builds on the relationship that Mack, the lead character, played with
subtlety and nuanced emotion by Sam Worthington (Yes! Sam can act.) We see the precious
sweetness of his youngest of three children, five year old Missy. We feel the abject horror of
the number one universal fear of every parent, the abduction and murder of their child by an
evil person.

This gut-wrenching dramatic incarnation is truly one of the most powerful and poignant I
have experienced in movies (As it was in the book). And Macks hopeless aftermath of
withdrawal and rejection of God rings with universal truth. This is an honest film of mans
spiritual struggles to make sense of a world of evil, suffering and God. There wasnt a moment
of inauthenticity in this part of the story.

But a few years later, Mack gets a letter claiming to be from Poppa, the name for God that
little Missy used to use. It says to meet him up at the shack in the mountains where they found
Missys tattered dress (never having found the body).

Mack reluctantly goes there and soon finds himself in the second half of the movie in a
personal discourse with the Almighty in the form of three people, an Asian woman, Sarayu,
who is supposed to be the Holy Spirit, a Middle Eastern young man who is Jesus, and the
Father, a black woman named Poppa (Well deal with that later).

The rest of the story is a dialogue between Mack and the godhead. God compassionately
forbears with Macks anger and tries to show him that he is too blinded to understand the

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truth of the bigger picture in relation to suffering and the goodness of God. He/She leads Mack
toward his redemption and forgiveness.

But is it biblical? Or is it another Hollywood bastardized subversion of Christianity?

I certainly didnt agree with everything presented in these dialogues, but they do well what
storytelling should do well, raise the questions and help to reorient the viewer to consider
their own blindspots by identifying with the protagonist and his own journey through the
pain.

This movie does this right when it comes to answering the problem of evil, namely, it doesnt
give a black and white answer, because there is none for our finite little human minds to
grasp. It seeks to point us toward a faith and trust in our Creator that despite what we think
we see and understand, he knows better and we cannot find redemption or peace or
forgiveness apart from faith in him.

One scene in particular expresses this paradigm shift with dramatic power on the level of the
best of any apologetics I have ever seen. Mack ends up in a cave with Wisdom, personified as a
women (Like she is in the book of Proverbs). She addresses Macks anger at God by allowing
him to sit on the judgment seat and actually be the judge for one minute. This illustrates the
profound universal truth of the absurdity and ignorance of all unbelievers accusations against
God. Wisdom places Mack on the judgment seat and shows him flashes of life and the people
he judges. He starts to see not only that he knows nothing of what is good and evil, but He
soon realizes that the center of all his problems lie in placing himself as the arbiter of all truth
in the universe and as the judge over all. His accusations turn against him to show himself as
the guilty one, not God. This is the quintessence of all unbelief. It is the heart of humanitys
separation from God: the sin of the Garden, seeking to know good and evil apart from God.
WOW. I have only seen this in one other movie before, Bruce Almighty, and it was great there
as well (an imperfect film, but an excellent one). This is a soul-wrenching truth captured
through turning the tables in a way that drama does best.

The Bad

One of the problems of The Shack is the problem with allegory and sermonizing. The second
half of the picture, though containing some emotionally moving moments of personal
revelations, becomes little more than an extended dialogue more akin to a play than a movie.
It gets a bit too talky at times, full of slogans and wise sayings that becomes heavy handed.

Rather than bringing out the truth through dramatic story, as the first half does, the second
half becomes a sermon, which becomes a weakness story-wise.

That said, I have to admit that the writing itself is quite strong. Though I would get a bit tired
of the lecturing, it was still well written and I had no cringe moments like I do with most
Christian movies. I disagreed with some significant stuff, but I didnt cringe because the
dialogue came out of well-developed characters.

Also, you dont have to agree with everything in it to appreciate the conversation, as well as
recognizing what good arguments are made.

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The Heresy

A couple of things were deeply troubling to the overall attempt to maintain an orthodox
Christian approach to the meaning of suffering and a good God: The depiction of God the
Father, and a contextual universalism that virtually ignores the justice of God. Let me explain.

I thought the respect of the Trinity was mostly fair. I even loved one moment at the end when
Mack asks the Trinity if he will still be with him, and the Spirit says, I always was, the Son
says, I always am and Poppa says, I always will be. And another moment of humor when
Mack first asks, Are you? implying God, and Poppa says, I am. I am that I am. All
humorous, yet perfectly orthodox moments.

There are some nods to relativism that creep in. The God of the Bible is likened to the Great
Spirit of Native American religion. The Poppa figure says, I have many names, and a few
other moments, like Poppa saying that she had a particular fondness for Neil Young. Really?
Neil Young, the pantheist Rock and Roller?

Okay, if these storytellers are Christians, they are either trying too hard to be postmodern and
placate non-Christians and other religions or they do not understand the exclusivist nature of
the God of the Bible. Maybe both.

Now, I know there is an uproar in some Christian circles about depicting God as a violation of
the second commandment, You shall not make for yourself a carved image, or any likeness of
anything that is in heaven above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the water under
the earth. You shall not bow down to them or serve them (Ex 20:4-5).

I have argued elsewhere that depicting the Son is not a violation of this commandment
because a) it is his humanity you are depicting, not his deity, and b) as long as it is not an icon
for worship, you are not violating the prohibition, which is the irrefutable context of the
command. If worship of the image was not the context, then the command would have to be
interpreted as prohibiting the depiction of all realistic art, which is patently contradictory,
especially since God had them depict things in heaven and earth IN THE TEMPLE ITSELF.

The Spirit may be depicted as a dove at Christs baptism, and the Father may be in the Angel of
Yahweh in the Old Testament who shows up in several places (But is that the Father?). So the
issue is grayer when it comes to depicting the Father and the Spirit. I dont like it, but it is
surely debateable, but not necessarily heretical.

Look, I have no problem with turning unbiblical assumptions upside down. For instance, the
movie correctly shows that the idea of God as an old man with a white beard is itself a cultural
bias that is not biblical. Same thing with race. That aint the problem. But when you contradict
the revelation, that is a different story.

A Little Deconstruction of Gender

The movie tries to make the point that God can choose to reveal himself however he wants.
And he does in Scripture. His presence is sometimes as a pillar of fire or even as a warrior
angel of Yahweh or a dove. The movie does this as well, because it explains that God depicted
himself as a woman from Macks past because he wasnt ready for a father image since his
own father abused him. And then later, Mack needed a father with him, so God (Poppa)
manifested himself as a father. Fair enough. I truly believe the storytellers tried to avoid

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transforming God into a goddess by stressing his essence as loving and caring untied to a
specific gender.

But nevertheless, in the Bible, all members of the Trinity always use the male gender as their
self-revelation. Metaphors in the Bible of nurturing traits like a hen are not gender specific, so
they dont count as female gender. Metaphor is similarity, NOT identity. But when it comes to
gender identity, God never reveals himself through pronouns other than male.

Go ahead and call that bigotry, but then you will find yourself in the place of Mack, being the
self-designated judge over God himself. Good luck with that.

I find it particularly revealing that in our culture that demands we accept the self-designated
gender of all persons, this movie then denies that same respect to God by NOT accepting his
self-designated gender (again, being judge over God).

If we do not accept a man who chooses to be called female, we are a bigot, but we are allowed
to deny Gods choice to be called by male pronouns? I would call that the ultimate bigotry.
Again, I do not think the storytellers were aware of this contradiction, but using todays
standards, that would make it unconscious bigotry, because they have internalized the
prejudices of our society without even realizing it. So they try to be respectful of Christian
notions of the Trinity, but dont realize they are actually engaging in cultural appropriation of
Christian culture.

Shame shame says this Biblical Justice Warrior

The issue here is that this unfortunately reinforces the anti-biblical agenda of our modern
society. By relativizing gender distinction within the Creators own identity, you reduce
gender to arbitrary social construction. This is anti-scientific, science denial that denies the
gender distinction created by God within the biology of the human race (Gen 1:27). Both male
and female are together in the image of God, but they are distinct and separated identities that
function as a unity within diversity (rooted in the Trinity). This movies gender relativity sadly
makes it captive to cultural accommodation as well.

There is another moment when Mack says some thick-headed statement and Poppa says,
Men. Such idiots sometimes. How peculiarly offensive in our age of obsession with sexist
accusations to engage in such flippant and insensitive sexism against men. And this double
standard is acceptable? So I guess its not okay to be sexist against women, but its totally okay
to be sexist against men (Im being ironic. The hypocrisy and contradiction of all these ism
accusations can only self-destruct or rather, self-deconstruct). I call for a March on
Washington against this gender shaming! #OscarsSoMaleBashing! How about a Day Without a
Man to show you how idiotic the world is without us? Logical consistency is a b***h, isnt it?

Redemption

This is an area where I changed my mind the more I thought about it.

On the surface, the movie affirms over and over again our need to trust God and have faith in
him in a generic sense, but when it comes to redemption, it will require a bit more
thoughtfulness to catch the underlying specific Christian theme of redemption here.

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The moment of Macks redemption lies in facing Wisdom in the cave where he realizes that he
is fallen and has sought to define good and evil apart from God. When he sees that even his
loved ones are not ultimately good by Gods standards, Mack says he doesnt want to be judge,
hes not capable. His condemnation of God choosing to save some and not others is rightfully
shown as fallacious when Wisdom gives Mack the choice of which of his children he must save
and which he must not. He then says, Take me instead.

Herein lies Macks redemption. While it is laudable that he seeks self-sacrifice for others, no
man can indeed die for another mans sins. This is the moment where Mack should learn that
he is unable to pay for his or anyone elses sins. That Jesus in fact did for him what he wanted
but could not do for his children. But that moment does not arrive. Mack is simply redeemed
without apparent reference to Christ by his own self-sacrifice.

BUT and that is a big but

The connection was made earlier to Jesus, being taken in our place when Mack was talking
with Poppa. Jesus died for us. God took him instead. That was made clear.

Now back to Macks revelation

Mack is then baptized in a waterfall as a symbol of that redemption. And this waterfall was
the symbol of another story of sacrifice from earlier in the story. Mack tells little Missy, before
she was abducted, about the Native American legend of the origin of the waterfall. And that
legend is about a little girl who sacrifices herself to save her tribe, that then creates the
waterfall. Missy then equates that to the Bible and asks, in obvious comparison, why Jesus had
to die. Though Mack doesnt believe the Bible at this point, we see he is also in denial and will
ultimately embrace it. So the movie does play with brilliant visual and existential metaphors
throughout that are quite satisfying on an artistic level.

At first blush, some Christians may not be satisfied with this subtle connection. They may even
argue that the need for Christs sacrifice at Macks most important moment is too vague or
unclear. But I would argue, it is there in a symbolic and creative way.

And to be honest, when you are talking Hollywood, this may be the only way they could
communicate that truth since most studios are not tolerant of a message that communicates
the Gospel of Jesus Christ with clarity. Some Christians may say that is cowardice. But when
you are operating within an oppressive environment, sometimes the only way you can get
your message out is to imply it.

The reality is that because of the Christophobia of our culture, if Jesus Christ was the clear
redemptive answer in this story, it would have been derided as preachy, not because it was
preachy, but simply because it is not acceptable as an answer, so it is dismissed by definition.
So in that context, I would argue that this movie does embody that sacrificial atonement of
Christ, albeit in a more subtle way than some would accept.

Another valid criticism might be that there is a relativistic equivalency of all religions when
the Great Spirit of American Native religion in that waterfall story is equated to the God of the
Bible. Which leads us to the next issue

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Universalism

Another problem that reared its ugly head in this story was universalism.

While the Poppa figure does deconstruct some of Macks false notions of judgment and
punishment, the problem comes when the very notion of punishment virtually vanishes from
the storyline.

God says, I dont need to punish people. Sin is its own punishment. This is an arguably
blasphemous contradiction to the God of the Bible who will render to each one according to
his works: to those who by patience in well-doing seek for glory and honor and immortality,
he will give eternal life; but for those who are self-seeking and do not obey the truth, but obey
unrighteousness, there will be wrath and fury (Romans 2:68). While we do reap what we
sow, sin doesnt punish us, God does. Again, not politically correct for precious snowflakes
who want a safe space for their sin, but the hard truth.

Macks judgment of the killer of his daughter is diffused by the appeal to the notion that
people only do bad because they were victim themselves. The sins of the Father become a
kind of excuse rather than an indicting truth. Even the killer was abused by his father. And
Mack is reminded that he is guilty of killing his father. But rather than this showing that we
are all guilty and deserving of judgment, it serves to deflect all judgment with a Gotcha style
diversion. Later, Poppa says that the killer too is Gods child.

Now the problem with this is that it fails to explain any kind of repentance, so the viewer is
left rather with the impression that everyone is forgiven without repentance as part of the
equation. Mack must forgive the killer of his daughter but without any real justice.

There is no justice in the context. The impression is clearly that hell and punishment are
deconstructed out of the picture as our own biases projected onto God.

There is no real affirmation of ultimate punishment or judgment of sin in this story. Poppa
simply says Nobody gets away, but the problem is that in this story, everybody does get
away. There is no ultimate judgment affirmed, only forgiveness. Nobody is ultimately judged.

The problem of a loving God without justice is that he is a most cruel and vicious monster,
who allows the ongoing torture of his victims who receive no justice for the crime done
against them.

Yes, the power of grace is that Jesus pays the price of justice and we dont get what we
deserve. But that is only for those who repent in Christ, not for those who do not. In Christ
there is a perfect unity of justice and mercy. But the condition of that application of salvation
is repentance. As Jesus said, unless you repent, you will all likewise perish. (Luke 13:3)
There is no salvation without repentance, and repentance is mysteriously absent from the
picture of everyone elses redemption except Macks.

In the Bible, there is an ultimate judgment of many whose sins are not forgiven. That balance
to mercy is effectively kept out of this story, much like the typical fake news problem we have
with the mainstream media avoiding inconvenient truths.

Im willing to accept that this may be a case where the storytellers are so focused on
correcting a fallacious view of God as all wrathful without love, that they unwittingly go to the

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other extreme of depicting him as all forgiving without wrath. Or maybe they are postmodern
and dont believe in hell or ultimate judgment for sins. I just dont know.

Fearful Symmetry

So I consider this a movie that is a messy conversation of good, bad, orthodoxy and
heterodoxy.

For that reason some will condemn it.

I had a mixed reaction. I found the discussion flawed and confused, but creatively worthy and
interesting despite those flaws.

Drama, Supernatural / Religious

http://godawa.com/shack-good-bad-heresy/

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