Brokeback Mountain Blues
I wanted to see it, but I didn't want to see it. I'm talking
about the "gay cowboy" movie called Brokeback Mountain (even
though I read Jake Gyllenhaal, one of the two major actors -
"Jack Twist," wants it to mean much more than that to its
audience).
I didn't want to see Brokeback Mountain because I felt it could
be considered some type of tacit approval of two men "falling in
love," which goes against my Christian grain and biblical
beliefs, but I wanted to see it because I am humanly "gay all
the way." However, I am not a practicing homosexual (some
would say I'm a professional one), sober and celibate by
choice, so help me God, because of deep spiritual
convictions.
I went and ran errands with a gay friend (who knows my beliefs
and knew me wild and now knows me tame), visiting his "lover" in
the Bowling Green, Ohio jail where he's doing ten days for a
drunk driving, donated an autographed copy of my book Beyond Babylon: Europe's Rise and
Fall to the main library in downtown Bowling Green
(since I was born there 46 years ago, but never lived there), we
picked up some fast food and visited my friend's mother where we
ate and then he asked if I wanted to see Brokeback Mountain that
would be showing at Franklin Park Mall (now called Southfield or
something since the Brits took it over) in Toledo shortly, so I
said yes and we rushed to get there and made it -- ten minutes
late. He had seen it a week earlier up in Michigan with some gay
and lesbian friends, thinking it wouldn't be shown around here
-- wrong!
Immediately you have to stand in awe (or sit and watch) the
scenery that is most spectacular and moving, especially as the
sheep are being herded and moving on the big screen in front of
you like you could reach out and pet one, and the mountains are
majestic aspiring to reach Heaven with their snow-capped tops
and trimmed with forests here and there, evergreens, and of
course I couldn't help but think of the irony of nature playing
such a prominent role in this film that the Apostle Paul would
say is against nature....
I was surprised to see so many older folks in the audience. I
thought they would all be set in their ways (I'm not saying
that's wrong in some ways), traditional, opposed to such
a real or imagined threat to "family values." Maybe they just
wanted to watch a movie that looked interesting or they're also
jaded, or desensitized to the seriousness of sin like too many,
or recognized that it could provoke discussion or a greater
understanding (without necessarily approving of it) of this
whole issue of homosexuality.
I thought the first sex scene was rather abrupt, nothing really
leading up to it, no mating game or cruising or furtive glances
or hints of anything out of the ordinary. Must have all been
buried underneath all that butch (masculine) appearance,
simmering somewhere, and the fuel on the fire was a tad too much
liquor, true to life. Alcohol can strip away any inhibitions
some might have or offer an excuse later to help cover your butt
(which is why I am sober and celibate by the grace of God). The
movie does help blow the stereotype that all homosexuals are
limp-wristed, sissy faggots - but didn't Rock Hudson already
prove that? Among others.
The whole idea (or unwholesome idea) of two men on a mountain,
far away from rules and regulations and norms, reminded me of a
passage within a little booklet I wrote years ago (God and
the Gays: What the Bible Really Says About
Homosexuality) to address many of the issues Brokeback
Mountain broached: about how some men who are basically
"straight" (heterosexual) will engage in homosexual acts while
in prison or a monastery, but will quickly revert to their
preferred heterosexual passion as soon as possible and pretend
nothing ever happened.
In BM, which we called "Bareback Mountain" among ourselves (no
"safe sex" practiced in it among the men or women involved since
it was set in the sixties), the fellows went their separate ways
initially and got married and thereby proved they were hybrids -
bisexuals - since they could obviously get sexually stimulated
by men and women. A curiosity to both heterosexuals and
homosexuals. But the first chance they had to get back together,
in every way, they jumped at it like a raging bull let out of
his cage. "Free at last, free at last!"
I've watched Oprah have men on her program who have been married
for years, with children, who have suddenly "discovered" they're
gay, and in "finding" themselves - isn't that just interestin'?
- lose their wife and children. What about the commitment they
made before both God and man? I don't care if you're gay or
straight, if you make a vow you should keep it! Why make victims
of the truly innocent wife and children who didn't ask for it?
Of course some will say they're all victims, and that's
true to an extent, but even if someone has "feelings" they
should control them or nip wrong thoughts in the bud -- not
permit them to take root and grow.
Why do some find it fascinating for a man to cheat on his wife
with another man, but would stone someone who was going through
his "midlife crisis" sleeping around with younger women to prove
some point to himself? It's not that the thoughts aren't there,
it is possible to lust after your neighbor's wife or husband (or
both), but you're supposed to rein in such maverick thoughts and
not let them run roughshod over your life and marriage!
Of course two men can fall in love, or a married man and woman
can fall in love with someone other than their spouse, but
you're not supposed to set yourself up for a fall, you're not
supposed to let yourself flirt with forbidden love, you're
supposed to control the thoughts rather than let them control
you (Genesis 4:7).
Brokeback Mountain forcibly brings all these tumultuous
thoughts, tormenting conflicts of interest and personal
struggles to the surface, surging like lava from a volcano,
which I'm now wrestling with and pouring out for others to
consider.
We can feel hopeless and all too human or we can transcend human
relationships, overcoming sin rather than being overcome by it,
by going up to the Mountain, following the path paved by
the Suffering Servant (Isaiah 53), who gave His back to be
beaten for us to break the power of sin over us, by whose
stripes you are healed, who bears our heartaches, sorrow and
sin; by going up to Mount Zion and "to the heavenly Jerusalem,
and to an innumerable company of angels..." (Hebrews 12:22).
Instead of wrong desires that only lead to self-destruction,
please let us yearn to return to Zion, time and again.