The movie Phone Booth depicts the hollow, emptiness of living a fake life for others’ consumption. Or to say it another way, it depicts the misery of living for false gods.
So Stu confesses:
“I’ve never done anything for anybody who couldn’t do something for me. I string along an eager kid with promises that I’ll pay him money. I only keep him around because he looks up to me. Adam, if you’re watching, don’t be a publicist…you’re too good for it.
"I lie in person and on the phone. I
lie to my friends. I lie to newspapers and magazines who sell my lies to more
and more people. I’m just a part of a big cycle of lies…I should be (f------)
President. I wear all this Italian (s----) because underneath I still feel like
the Bronx
"Kelly, looking at you now I’m
ashamed of myself. I mean….I work so
hard on this image …. I only proved I should be alone. I’ve just been something I’m not for so long
I’m so I’m afraid you won’t like what’s underneath.
"But here I am…I’m just flesh and
blood and weakness and uh… I love you so much. (Crying) I take off this ring because it only reminds me of how I’ve
failed you. And uh…I don’t want to give
you up, I want to make things better…but it may not be my choice anymore. You deserve better.”
And shame. The cycle of shame has been occurring because
he hasn’t been able to face his wife, whom he feels is too good for him. So, to deal with his feelings of
worthlessness, he has been calling a young actress (Katie Holmes) from a phone
booth and taking off his wedding ring during the calls. Full of shame, he turns to mental/emotional adultery,
which causes more shame. So he confesses
the shame and all the rest in a jaw-dropping scene.
Following Bonhoeffer’s lead, this
kind of confession and repentance is supposed to be a normal, regular feature
of Life Together. It’s not the only element of Life Together, but it’s a
significant element. As Bonhoeffer says,
“The man who is alone with his sin is truly alone.”
The Church, as a corporate body, is to do daily life like this scene of confession. Why? Because the Church is filled with people who are, in Luther’s words, simul iustus et peccador. In English, this means simultaneously sinning and justified. If we regularly enacted this scene from Phone Booth, we would honestly and brokenly proclaim our peccador-ness. If we confessed our sinfulness to our spouses, children, parents, friends, colleagues, neighbors, then others around us wouldn’t feel the pressure to display only their iustus-ness.
Besides, any (and thus all) justification we have is alien to us. Our true, actual justification before God and others is alien in that it comes from outside of us. Not one smidgen of the righteousness that pleases God comes from us; rather, it is wholly a gift of grace that we are covered in Jesus’ blood and righteousness. So, why are we wasting so much time and energy on displaying our self-righteousness. Why not just live according to Scripture…and boast in weakness?
We are scared to death to boast in our weakness because it violates culture (best foot forward, turn your good side to the camera), but if all of us in the Church would boast in our weakness together, we would become a Gospel-suffused community of honesty, brokenness, repentance, grace, forgiveness and restoration. In short, we would be a community of joyful intimacy.
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