In 2023 I lastly learn Blue Like Jazz by Donald Miller, twenty years after it was initially printed. It felt like his model of a Jack Kerouac stream-of-consciousness memoir, albeit framed by way of the lens of “nonreligious ideas on Christian spirituality.” As such, it offers a snapshot of a really particular interval in Christian tradition, introducing characters like Mark Driscoll and Joshua Harris whereas highlighting Ravi Zacharias’s writings. We view every of those males fairly in a different way with the passage of time.
Nonetheless, I’m significantly considering one excerpt from Miller’s e book. He talks about how his pal likes the actor and author Ethan Hawke. It comes out that she likes him as a result of he’s cool. Miller says:
I used to be in a cranky temper so I requested her if she knew what he believed…Believes about what? She requested. Believes about something, I mentioned. Effectively, she instructed me as she sat again in her chair, I don’t know. I don’t know what he believes. Do you suppose he’s cool? I requested her. After all, he’s cool, she mentioned. And that’s the factor that’s so irritating to me. I don’t know if we actually like popular culture icons, observe them, purchase into them as a result of we resonate with what they consider or whether or not we purchase into them as a result of we expect they’re cool.
I wholeheartedly agree with Miller’s premise that our tradition makes idols out of sure folks based mostly on their perceived picture (and coolness). There’s one thing superficial about it at the same time as proper beliefs don’t essentially preclude different shortcomings. That’s little doubt fodder for an entire different essay on movie star.
And whereas I resonate with what the writer is saying, I might contend that Ethan Hawke’s profession over the past twenty years has proved him to be one of the vital fascinating actors within the business. He belies the primary impressions from his earliest roles and has principally eclipsed the picture Miller is annoyed with. If we do an in depth studying of his newer inventive selections and a few of his chosen interviews, we will start to hone in on one thing extra substantive.
Hawke speaks implicitly to Miller’s criticism by acknowledging in numerous interviews that he hasn’t been capable of make a primary impression in twenty years. Whether or not it’s Actuality Bites or Jesse from The Earlier than Trilogy, folks suppose they know him, they usually have preconceived notions about who he’s as an individual. Informal followers who solely see him as a celeb both need to preserve him in formaldehyde or to work together with somebody who has been part of the cultural zeitgeist as soon as upon a time. It has nothing to do with interacting with one other continuously altering human being.
In a unique dialog, Hawke had a query posed to him about what he considered being a “Scorching younger star” within the wake of his early success, and he comes on the query facetiously. Like every younger man he most likely thought he was cool, and but he by no means put a lot weight on it. He has admitted that individuals have known as him pretentious on any variety of events, and but Kris Kristofferson suggested him to not fear as a result of as you become older folks might be nicer, they usually’ll love you for it!
He appears to have grown into his pretension, and whether or not he’s perceived as cool or not at giant, he’s remained passionate concerning the arts. Moreover, his recommendation to youthful creatives is to be pretentious with a humorousness—you’re not taking your self too significantly—whereas nonetheless aspiring to one thing extra. It looks like a loftier endeavor past the Hollywood rat race. To this finish, he’s put these aspirations into follow with a few of his latest movie roles.
“Faith shouldn’t be a heat electrical blanket—it’s the cross.”
In Paul Schrader’s First Reformed, Hawke performs a pastor of a dwindling church who goes by way of an existential battle within the wake of the loss of life of a younger man he was counseling, and within the face of the approaching local weather disaster. He famous in an interview that we regularly see non secular figures portrayed as ignorant or evil with out ever really exploring deep problems with why we’re born, why we die, and what we’re purported to be doing inside this mortal coil.
The movie evokes a want to deal with this subject material significantly with true consideration. It actually does really feel like a better calling, and it’s artwork and leisure for the sake of exploring the deepest human questions. That’s a present for an actor to have the ability to discover and a present for an viewers if an actor is prepared to go there. Nonetheless, by the identical token, Hawke has some real reservations about sure non secular pondering as mirrored in Schrader’s movie. He mentioned in a unique Q&A:
I don’t perceive an evangelical neighborhood that doesn’t appear to have learn the New Testomony. My character is saying, “Why don’t you care about God’s earth? Why aren’t we caring for one another? Why are we not instructing, ‘My father’s rain falls equally on the simply and the unjust (Matthew 5:45)?’ We’re all on this collectively,” and he’s feeling this very profoundly.
This is just one instance of Hawke’s earnest consideration of Christian instructing. In an interview with Stephen Colbert, Hawke gave an introduction to his main position in James McBride’s Civil Struggle-era miniseries on John Brown, The Good Lord Hen. His character was a staunch Calvinist and a really severe Christian who took God and the thought of the imago dei very significantly. After being a non-violent abolitionist, he determined he needed to be prepared to struggle and shake folks out of their apathy.
Brown did not incite a revolution and was in the end executed, however what he did accomplish was to get up the White Christians within the North. If there’s a standard thread right here, we see two males who’ve an incisive, ardent sense of what Christian religion is. It’s not low-cost, nevertheless it prices one thing to select up your cross and observe Him (Matthew 16:24).
Ethan Hawke and his daughter Maya additionally share a mutual appreciation for the Southern Gothic writings of Flannery O’Connor. He has spoken about her quick tales from “Parker’s Again” to “Revelation,” which all characteristic the writer’s scandalizing depictions of grace. The query she all the time appears to be asking is what will we do in response to those moments? This is among the components that turned the bedrock of the Hawkes’s soon-to-be-released movie on O’Connor known as Wildcat.
Of their dialog with Bishop Robert Barron, Ethan talks at size about how his dad and mom launched him to writers like O’Connor, Thomas Merton, Walker Percy, and Dorothy Day—writers who knowledgeable his worldview as a younger man. His understanding of spiritual religion is sort of outstanding given his following assertion. He mentioned:
Faith shouldn’t be a heat electrical blanket, it’s the cross, and the cross holds the struggling of the world. This can be a very profound image of human struggling and failure of neighborhood, that they are often offered with the kid of God and crucify him. We stay in a fallen world. To make all of it good and to make all of it heat and fuzzy, you’re probably not speaking about religion.
Hawke continues to shirk the will to be perceived as cool, and it’s evident he continues to develop and keep curious. These phrases signify a person who has continued to progress a good distance from Miller’s notion of him in Blue Like Jazz as a result of they recommend an artist with deeply-held beliefs. Curiously sufficient, Miller himself did provide up another person who appears worthy of additional consideration as a part of this dialog.
The Cool Christian & Christ Crucified
Whereas Miller was rightfully miffed by the plenty who observe pop idols as a result of they’re cool with no consideration of their beliefs, he additionally highlights another concept he had as soon as to make Christianity cool. He thought he might use artwork to offer the religion extra credibility. It will make folks come to phrases with their predilection towards sin, and it might change the world. He goes on to say:
My modern Christian was deep. Deep water. A poet. He studied [Hunter S.] Thompson throughout his drug years, through the prostitute years…[Allen] Ginsberg’s “I watched the best minds of my era descend into insanity…” was to him, about sin nature. A part of him was about social justice.
On a cursory degree, Ethan Hawke shares a lot in frequent with the outside lifetime of Miller’s idealized Christian nicknamed Tom Toppins. He did a complete TedTalk on Ginsberg and the artist’s calling to play the idiot and shake humanity out of their on a regular basis lives. If it’s not evident already, he’s an avid reader, a lover of music, and points of religion and social justice permeate lots of the interviews he offers.
However his candor typically feels extra honest than any Gen-Xer pastiche to make Christianity extra interesting. And but in honing in on the irony of Ethan Hawke being fairly near Miller’s evocation of the Cool Christian who holds real beliefs, it’s vital to not commit one other distortion.
Christianity itself doesn’t require us to be cool. It requires religion, humility, and an acknowledgment of our want for grace—a grace that cuts by way of hypocrisy and fanaticism. Is that this cool? I suppose it depends upon whom you ask, though it doesn’t appear to be it ought to matter. We don’t want Christianity to be cool simply as Christ doesn’t want us. We want Christ. It’s that easy.
Giving Miller the good thing about the doubt, maybe that is what he started to acknowledge implicitly inside the pages of Blue Like Jazz. His idealized Christian in the end feels superfluous. As Hawke mentions, “faith shouldn’t be a heat electrical blanket, it’s the cross.” Nothing can change the underside line: Our sinfulness led Jesus Christ to die for us. Interval.
Instantly my thoughts goes to Paul’s phrases to the Corinthians. He’s speaking to an viewers of Jews and Greeks, and it might simply as simply be mentioned to extra trendy listeners, each legalistic Christians and those that lean extra antinomian. He says, “We preach Christ crucified, a stumbling block to Jews and folly to Gentiles, however to those that are known as, each Jews and Greeks, Christ the facility of God and the knowledge of God (1 Corinthians 1:22-24).
What’s encouraging about Hawke’s story shouldn’t be that he has a disinterest in fame or subjective coolness and even that he’s intrigued by non secular issues per se, although this may all be lauded. Essentially, he has an intuitive understanding of scripture that’s humbling. It cuts by way of the glut of Christian tradition, getting on the coronary heart of what it means to contemplate the creator God and the implications of the scandal of grace present in His Son’s loss of life on the cross. There’s extra that Christians can quibble over, however as I don’t know Ethan Hawke, that is all I can say: I might do nicely to be taught from him in humility.
Blue Like Jazz feels very a lot of its time and for a selected viewers. That doesn’t imply it’s not nonetheless instructive, even significant. Nonetheless, Christianity is rightfully timeless and common. It offers a story to make sense of the damaged world we stay in. Could God be with Ethan Hawke and all of us as we grapple with life’s vital questions by religion and thru superbly inventive artistic endeavors. Nonetheless, extra imperatively, allow us to throw off coolness and cling to the cross and Christ crucified.
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