Is the Pope Catholic . . . Enough?
http://www.nytimes.com/2003/03/09/magazine/09GIBSON.html
March 9, 2003
The first sign that something unusual was going on up
the hill was the appearance of a fleet of brand-new
Volkswagen bugs, lined up on a muddy bluff like a row of
oversize Easter eggs. It was a local handyman who
spotted them while he was out on a walk through this
little valley in the mountains northwest of Los Angeles,
near Malibu. Neighbors had already been talking about
the 16-acre property on the valley's south slope, and
soon word spread that a church group called Holy Family
had purchased the site with plans to break ground for a
9,300-square-foot Mission-style church complex.
Among the neighbors who wondered about the new
arrival was my father, a recently retired documentary
filmmaker who joined the local homeowners association
when he moved to the area two years ago. This latest
project, however, wasn't the usual commercial complex or
instant enclave of luxury homes that tended to attract
the association's attention. It was a church, that much
was clear, but it didn't sound at all like your
garden-variety community parish. A representative for
the property owner explained that the church was
Catholic, but it wasn't affiliated with the Roman
Catholic archdiocese. While the church building was
relatively large, the congregation was quite small, with
about 70 members. And though religious practices and
rituals would be familiar to Catholics, there was one
big difference: Sunday Mass, it was reported, would be
conducted entirely in Latin.
Lest anyone get the impression that this band of
spiritual seekers might disperse if the collection
baskets were to run dry, a church representative assured
the neighbors that the church was supported by an
unnamed individual congregant with ''tremendous
financial viability.''
Would that explain the VW bugs? The handyman recalls
posing the question at an early community meeting. He
was told that the congregant financing the church ''had
given them as gifts to his nieces and nephews,'' he
says. ''I remember thinking, 'That's some generous
uncle.'''
•••
The person behind the unusually well-endowed chapel
turned out to be the actor Mel Gibson, star of ''Mad
Max,'' ''Lethal Weapon'' and ''Braveheart.'' The church
is operated by a nonprofit corporation; according to
public financial records, Gibson is its director, chief
executive officer and sole benefactor, making more than
$2.8 million in contributions over the past three
years.
The fact that Gibson is building a church in the
hills near Los Angeles should come as no huge surprise.
Gibson's Catholicism has never been a secret, and in
fact gives him a sort of reverse-exoticism in a town
where other stars dabble in Buddhism, kabala and
Scientology. An avowed family man still on his first
marriage, with seven children to show for it, Gibson
smokes, raises cattle, publicly shuns plastic surgery
and seems wholly unmoved by most of the liberal-left
causes favored by industry peers. Recently, however,
something beyond the impulse to entertain has been
showing up in Gibson's work. Last year he played a
former minister who rediscovers religion amid an alien
invasion in ''Signs'' and a reverent Catholic lieutenant
colonel in the war drama ''We Were Soldiers.'' In these
films, but especially in a new movie, a monumentally
risky project called ''The Passion,'' which he co-wrote
and is currently directing in and around Rome, Gibson
appears increasingly driven to express a theology only
hinted at in his previous work.
That theology is a strain of Catholicism rooted in
the dictates of a 16th-century papal council and
nurtured by a splinter group of conspiracy-minded
Catholics, mystics, monarchists and disaffected
conservatives - including a seminary dropout and
rabble-rousing theologist who also happens to be Mel
Gibson's father. Gibson is the star practitioner of this
movement, which is known as Catholic traditionalism.
Seeking to maintain the faith as it was understood
before the landmark Second Vatican Council of 1962-1965,
traditionalists view modern reforms as the work of
either foolish liberals or hellbent heretics. They
generally operate outside the authority or oversight of
the official church, often maintaining their own
chapels, schools, seminaries and clerical orders.
Central to the movement is the Tridentine Mass, the
Latin rite that was codified by the Council of Trent in
the 16th century and remained in place until the Second
Vatican Council deemed that Mass should be held in the
popular language of each country. Latin, however, is
just the beginning - traditionalists refrain from eating
meat on Fridays, and traditionalist women wear
headdresses in church. The movement seeks to revive an
orthodoxy uncorrupted by the theological and social
changes of the last, say, 300 years or so.
Michael W. Cuneo, a sociology professor at Fordham
University who reported on right-wing Catholic dissent
in his 1997 book, ''The Smoke of Satan,'' wrote that
traditionalists ''would like nothing more than to be
transported back to Louis XIV's France or Franco's
Spain, where Catholicism enjoyed an unrivaled presidency
over cultural life and other religions existed entirely
at its beneficence.''
While traditionalists agree on the broad outlines of
correct religious practice, the movement is hardly
united. Its brief history is the story of a movement
branching off into ever-smaller submovements. Today
there are approximately 600 traditionalist chapels,
representing a number of theological streams, including
the more Vatican-friendly Society of Saint Pius X, the
more strident Society of Saint Pius V, the militantly
traditional Mount St. Michael's community and the
Apostles of Infinite Love, a monastic community in
Quebec led by a onetime Catholic brother who claims to
be the incarnation of the one true pope. All told, there
are an estimated 100,000 traditionalists in the United
States.
Gibson's church may be the most comfortably endowed
traditionalist house of worship in the country, but in
other respects it is quite typical. Most of the
congregation met while attending services held by a
traditionalist priest, whose church in the San Gabriel
Valley was eventually taken over by the Society of Saint
Pius X. A group of congregants, including the Gibson
family, left in protest. They gained approval from Los
Angeles County to build their own church early last year
after agreeing to a set of operating guidelines -
covering such issues as parking, lighting, signage and
hours of services - with the regional planning
commission and neighbors (including my father).
When I called the church elder who was Holy Family's
representative at the county meetings, he agreed to an
interview and accepted my request to attend a service,
on the conditions that I not identify him or any member
of the congregation beyond Mel Gibson, and that I
withhold details that might invite the interest of fans
or paparazzi. He also asked that I refrain from speaking
to the priest, the congregants or anyone else during my
visit. He told me that anyone seen speaking to me ''will
not be welcome back at our church again.'' After all the
warnings, I was a little surprised to find Sunday Mass
at Holy Family an almost entirely ordinary experience.
The service itself was remarkably similar to what I
remember from parochial school - that is, until a homily
delivered near the end of the two-hour Mass. The priest
read a parable from St. Matthew about a farmer whose
fields are raided in the night by an enemy who spreads a
noxious weed in his wheat. The evil in the story, the
priest said, is ''the modern church,'' whose wickedness
will be dealt with on Judgment Day.
''The wiping out of our opposition must wait until
harvest time,'' he concluded. It suddenly became clear
why Gibson isn't worshiping with his fellow Catholic
Martin Sheen down at Our Lady of Malibu.
•••
Gibson is widely known in traditionalist circles, and
he has made no secret of his religious affiliation. ''I
go to an all-pre-Vatican II Latin Mass,'' he told USA
Today in an interview two years ago. ''There was a lot
of talk, particularly in the 60's, of 'Wow, we've got to
change with the times.' But the Creator instituted
something very specific, and we can't just gochange
it.'' More recently, the Italian newspaper Il Giornale
reported that Gibson made a ''scathing attack against
the Vatican,'' calling it a ''wolf in sheep's
clothing.''
While many traditionalists can't abide some of
Gibson's career choices - the onscreen baring of his
bottom is a particular source of concern - most are
content to overlook his occasional wild streak. ''Gibson
should get the tsk-tsk award for lowering his impressive
acting talent on occasion,'' wrote a priest known as
Father Moderator on the Internet posting board Traditio.
Nonetheless, the priest continued, Gibson ''never ceases
to project his traditional Catholic faith to the public.
Who else in such a prominent position ever does?''
Mel Gibson is also known in traditionalist circles as
the most famous son of Hutton Gibson, a well-known
author and activist who has railed against the Vatican
for more than 30 years. His books on the topic include
''Is the Pope Catholic?'' and ''The Enemy Is Here.''
(Precisely where is indicated by a map on the dust
jacket - it's a cartoon of Italy, drawn by one of his 49
grandchildren). Gibson père also publishes a quarterly
newsletter called ''The War Is Now!,'' which includes
all manner of verbal volleys against a pope he calls
''Garrulous Karolus, the Koran Kisser.''
Now living in suburban Houston, Hutton Gibson invited
me for a weekend visit after an initial phone
conversation. When I arrived, he was wrapping up an
interview with a syndicated radio program. Hutton Gibson
is 84 but seemed a good deal younger (which he credited
to his abstinence from drinking, daily doses of vitamins
and ''never going near a doctor''). He is energized by
an abiding love of corny jokes and lively debate, and he
peppered a commentary on the scandals facing the
Catholic Church with jokes about Texans, the Irish and,
inevitably, the pope.
He said he speaks to his son frequently and knows all
about Mel's chapel in the hills. ''Mel wasn't raised in
the new church, and he wouldn't go for it anymore than I
would,'' he said. ''I've got to say that my whole family
is with me - all 10 of them.''
While his rhetoric showed no signs of mellowing, the
elder Gibson had plenty of reasons to be satisfied. For
one, he is a newlywed. His doting bride, Joye, is a
statuesque Oregonian who playfully addressed him as
''Mr. G.'' Surrounded by ceramic knickknacks and photos
of his grandchildren, he seemed entirely at ease with
himself and the world. Which made it all the odder when
he launched into one of his complex conspiracy theories.
On our first night together, he nursed a mug of
sassafras tea while leading a four-hour tutorial on
so-called sedevacantism, which holds that all the popes
going back to John XXIII in the 1950's have been
illegitimate - ''anti-popes,'' he called them. As Hutton
explained it, the conservative cardinal Giuseppe Siri
was probably passed over for pope in 1958 in favor of a
more reform-minded candidate. Hutton said Cardinal Siri
was duly elected, but was forced to step aside by
conspirators inside and outside the church. These
shadowy enemies might have threatened ''to atom-bomb the
Vatican City,'' he said. In another conversation, he
told me that the Second Vatican Council was ''a Masonic
plot backed by the Jews.''
The intrigue got only murkier and more menacing from
there. The next day after church, over a plate of roast
beef at a buffet joint off the highway, conversation
turned to the events of Sept. 11. Hutton flatly rejected
that Al Qaeda hijackers had anything to do with the
attacks. ''Anybody can put out a passenger list,'' he
said. So what happened? ''They were crashed by remote
control,'' he replied. He moved on to the Holocaust,
dismissing historical accounts that six million Jews
were exterminated. ''Go and ask an undertaker or the guy
who operates the crematorium what it takes to get rid of
a dead body,'' he said. ''It takes one liter of petrol
and 20 minutes. Now, six million?''
Across the table, Joye suddenly looked up from her
plate. She was dressed in a stylish outfit for church,
wearing a leather patchwork blazer and a felt beret in
place of the traditional headdress. She had kept quiet
most of the day, so it was a surprise when she
cheerfully piped in. ''There weren't even that many Jews
in all of Europe,'' she said.
''Anyway, there were more after the war than
before,'' Hutton added. The entire catastrophe was
manufactured, said Hutton, as part of an arrangement
between Hitler and ''financiers'' to move Jews out of
Germany. Hitler ''had this deal where he was supposed to
make it rough on them so they would all get out and
migrate to Israel because they needed people there to
fight the Arabs,'' he said.
•••
Whether any of this has rubbed off on Hutton's son
Mel is an open question. A church elder at Holy Family
says that while the two share the same foundation of
faith, Mel Gibson parts company with his father on many
points. ''He doesn't go along with a lot of what his dad
says,'' he says. And beyond claiming to have seen the
plans for Holy Family and attended services with the
congregation, Hutton Gibson has no apparent connection
to his son's church in California. Still, Mel Gibson has
shown some of his father's flair for conspiracy
scenarios. In a 1995 Playboy interview, he related a
sketchy theory that various presidential assassinations
and assassination attempts have been acts of retribution
for economic reforms that challenged the powers-that-be.
''There's something to do with the Federal Reserve that
Lincoln did, Kennedy did and Reagan tried,'' he said.
''I can't remember what it was. My dad told me about it.
Everyone who did this particular thing that would have
fixed the economy got undone. Anyway, I'll end up dead
if I keep talking.''
Perhaps nothing Gibson has done will serve as a more
public announcement of his faith and worldview than the
project he's now completing in Rome. ''The Passion'' is
a graphic depiction of the last 12 hours in the life of
Jesus Christ, based on biblical accounts and the
writings of two mystic nuns. Gibson is returning to the
director's chair for the first time since ''Braveheart''
in 1995, but he will not appear on-screen. There will
not, in fact, be any big stars. Nor will there be
subtitles, which might prove a challenge for many
moviegoers, since the actors will speak only Aramaic and
Latin. Gibson has said that he hopes to depict Christ's
ordeal using ''filmic storytelling'' techniques that
will make the understanding of dialogue unnecessary.
The idea came to him a decade ago, he announced at a
news conference last September, and he is soldiering on
now without the backing of a studio or a U.S.
distributor. ''Obviously, nobody wants to touch
something filmed in two dead languages,'' he said.
''They think I'm crazy, and maybe I am. But maybe I'm a
genius.''
In Hollywood, the astonishment many felt upon hearing
about the project has been heightened by reports that
his production company is paying the film's estimated
$25 million cost itself. Making a movie that has
anything at all to do with religion is risky enough -
remember ''The Last Temptation of Christ''? But spending
your own money to help pay for it?
''It's a very gutsy thing to do - I certainly
wouldn't do it,'' says the veteran producer Alan Ladd
Jr., who chose Gibson to star in and direct
''Braveheart.'' ''But he wouldn't do it if he couldn't
it pull off, at least in his own mind. He's obviously
satisfying some deep personal need in himself.''
Only Gibson knows the precise nature of that personal
need, and he declined numerous requests for an
interview, limiting his public comments to a January
appearance on the Fox news program ''The O'Reilly
Factor,'' in which he complained about inquiries
regarding his faith and suggested that any reporter
asking such questions might be part of a plot to
undermine his message of salvation. ''I think he's been
sent,'' he told Bill O'Reilly. ''When you touch this
subject, it does have a lot of enemies.''
Many traditionalists, meanwhile, hope the graphic
approach Gibson is taking - production stills show the
star, James Caviezel, beaten to a pulp and drenched in
blood, fresh from a flagellation - will serve as a
big-budget dramatization of key points of traditionalist
theology. After waging a quiet war against what they see
as the Vatican's overly accommodating theology,
traditionalists suddenly find themselves equipped with a
most unfamiliar weapon: star power. ''I'm delighted he's
getting more involved,'' says Bishop Daniel Dolan,
founder of more than 30 Latin Mass churches and one of
the most influential traditionalists in the country.
''To put the weight of his Hollywood celebrity behind
the truth that the whole modern church structure is
rotten to the core is excellent. I welcome it.''
A friend of the Gibson family has his own ideas about
how traditionalist thought is informing ''The Passion.''
Gary Giuffré, a founder of the traditionalist St. Jude
Chapel in Texas, says Gibson told him about his plans
for ''The Passion'' on a recent visit. ''It will
graphically portray the intense suffering of Christ,
perhaps as no film has done before.'' Most important, he
says, the film will lay the blame for the death of
Christ where it belongs - which some traditionalists
believe means the Jewish authorities who presided over
his trial and delivered him to the Romans to be
crucified.
In his conversation with Bill O'Reilly (who prefaced
the interview by disclosing that Gibson's production
company has optioned the rights to O'Reilly's mystery
novel), Gibson was asked whether his account might
particularly upset Jews. ''It may,'' he said. ''It's not
meant to. I think it's meant to just tell the truth. I
want to be as truthful as possible. But when you look at
the reasons why Christ came, why he was crucified - he
died for all mankind and he suffered for all mankind. So
that, really, anyone who transgresses has to look at
their own part or look at their own
culpability.''