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cbayer

(146,218 posts)
Fri Apr 5, 2013, 02:03 PM Apr 2013

Roger Ebert's Religion

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/s-brent-plate/roger-eberts-religion_b_3018344.html

S. Brent Plate
Visiting Associate Professor of Religious Studies, Hamilton College

Posted: 04/05/2013 9:03 am

"I know it is coming, and I do not fear it, because I believe there is nothing on the other side of death to fear." -Roger Ebert, Life Itself


His mother prayed he'd become a priest, but he questioned the catechism of his Catholic school. Years later, encounters with Ingmar Bergman rekindled his childhood theological tussles, and he found a kinship with the great Swedish director's own wrestling with Christianity. Years later still, in and out of hospitals and treatments for thyroid cancer, his beloved wife Chaz held his hand and recited Psalm 23 and the Lord's Prayer to him.

Roger Ebert was explicit about his lack of religious commitment. In his 2011 memoir Life Itself, he comes clean: "No, I am not a Buddhist. I am not a believer, not an atheist, not an agnostic. I am more content with questions than answers." In so doing, he inadvertently expressed just how much of a religious person he was. As the astute Catholic monk Thomas Merton once declared, "A man is known better by his questions than his answers," and indeed religious traditions themselves unfold in the oscillation between questions and answers, answers and questions. There is no great person of faith, be it Abraham or Moses, St Augustine or St John of the Cross, Jesus or Muhammad, who did not express doubt, did not ask a lot of questions.

Ebert's questioning revealed for him the human and ethical aspects of religious traditions, and he realized how Catholicism made him into a humanist before he even knew what humanism was. In an interview posted on Flavorwire in 2011 he stated, "I believe my social conscience and my liberalism were founded on the teachings of Jesus." Through it all he was as anxious about the absolutes of atheism as the certainty of the pious, suggesting, "Those who say that 'believer' and 'atheist' are concrete categories do violence to the mystery we must be humble enough to confess."

In this he was the best kind of writer about religious matters, the kind that rationally appreciated the need for the imagination and that imaginatively reconceived reasonable thinking. In film, he was attracted to mystics like Werner Herzog and the Catholic guilt of Martin Scorsese; in literary measures to the interrogative inquisitiveness of Studs Terkel.

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MADem

(135,425 posts)
1. Someone (full credit to Hissyspit) posted an essay he wrote in GD. It's a very good read.
Fri Apr 5, 2013, 09:02 PM
Apr 2013

He did say that a lot of his views were formulated as a consequence of the social aspects of the faith he was raised in, even as he didn't take the theology into adulthood.

I especially enjoyed his remarks about "kindness." We could all take a lesson from this guy:

DU link: http://www.democraticunderground.com/10022615719

Full essay at SALON: http://www.salon.com/2011/09/15/roger_ebert/

cbayer

(146,218 posts)
2. Thanks for the links.
Sat Apr 6, 2013, 12:55 PM
Apr 2013

While I enjoyed his movie reviews, I did not really know who he was or how complex he could be.

No Vested Interest

(5,167 posts)
3. Funeral service at Holy Name Cathedral in Chicago, Ill.,
Mon Apr 8, 2013, 06:04 PM
Apr 2013

honors late film critic Roger Ebert.

Excerpts from column by Mark Caro, Chicago Tribune reporter, April 8, 2013:

&quot T)he Rev. Michael Pfleger, (who) ended the service by saying, "The balconies of heaven are filled with angels saying, "Thumbs up."

"The Rev. John F. Costello invoked the film "The Hours" and its observations on lives cut short as he discussed how Ebert, raised Catholic in Urbana, wrestled with "the mystery of faith" not as someone who rejected God but rather someone forever seeking further understanding."
"I wanted to dispel the notion that he was an agnostic," Costello said after the service. "He was a believer."

The gatherers were reminded often of Ebert's love of laughter, but this was a solemn affair, as befitting a 90-minute Catholic mass.

locks

(2,012 posts)
5. Thanks Roger
Mon Apr 8, 2013, 07:07 PM
Apr 2013

Boulder/CU's annual World Affairs Conference started today on the CU campus with many tributes to our friend Roger Ebert. He attended this conference for 40 years; in 1975 he began his Movies Interruptus series where anyone who had a question could stop the movie and hear his great comments. All of Boulder, the students, the panelists (especially Molly Ivins) loved him and he called Boulder his home in an alternative dimension.

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