J.E.S.U.S.A.: A SPECIAL OFFER FOR ORTHODOXY IN DIALOGUE READERS by Kevin Miller

For context see Andrew Klager’s review, Documentary: J.E.S.U.S.A., and Confessions of a Catechumen and Ex-Marine.

Before we get to the special offer regarding my new feature-length documentary, I want to let you in on a little secret. The original title of my film was not J.E.S.U.S.A. In fact, its original title started off as a joke, a riff on one of the most popular movies of the early 1990s that is still referenced in so many ways today: The Silence of the Lambs.

I know; considering The Silence of the Lambs is about an FBI agent who teams up with a cannibal to hunt for a serial killer who is making a full-body suit out of his victims’ flesh, it seems an odd choice to inspire the title of a documentary about non-violence, right? Well, perhaps not if you hear our alternate version. All we did was take away one little letter. This is what we got: The Silence of the Lamb. Get that? Lamb, singular. Read More


DOCUMENTARY: J.E.S.U.S.A. reviewed by Andrew Klager

J.E.S.U.S.A.
Kevin Miller, Writer/Director/Editor
Hat Rock Capital LLC and Kevin Miller XI Productions Inc., 2020

jesusa

I’ve watched Kevin Miller’s documentary J.E.S.U.S.A. twice now. The first time made an immediate impact on me, but the second time made me want to watch it a third time. Multiple views are needed to absorb, internalize, and process its rich content and dueling expressions of ugliness and beauty. Impressive in his dialectical interplay of complementary and expanding ideas, Miller has created a thoughtful, sometimes distressing, utterly engaging visual triumph that I’ve always wanted to see but could never find.

About the first half of this gem of a documentary explores the pervasive American Christian fixation on violence and militarism cloaked in an insular nationalism, but then gradually deploys this unfortunate pathology as a case study of a much broader exploration into dehumanizing, othering, mimesis, and scapegoating in our conscious or unconscious attempts to ignore commandments of Jesus that He meant for us to take seriously. As David Bentley Hart remarks in the film, we’ve “been inoculated against the Gospel” — given just enough to make us immune to the fulness of the Christian faith that includes nonviolence.

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OPEN LETTER FROM THE CLOSET

We received the following email on the afternoon of Holy Saturday in response to Young, LGBTQ, and Stuck at Home. In allowing Orthodoxy in Dialogue to publish it, our young correspondent hopes to let other young, closeted or semi-closeted, LGBTQ Christians know that they are not alone. He also hopes that Orthodox hierarchs, pastors, and laity will begin to provide a spiritual home where LGBTQ people can feel respected and safe.

The Dark Closet - Yaretzi Alvarez - Wattpad

I am a 20 year-old trans man and Christian. I’ve been reading Orthodoxy in Dialogue for close to a year now. I was raised Catholic but starting last May I started to explore more of the old apostolic churches only to find a wealth of history and tradition among Orthodox churches that was previously unknown to me entirely. Since then I’ve been interested in joining an Orthodox church, preferably spending some time as a newcomer in a parish before making that decision. Unfortunately, my college has essentially no Orthodox Christian presence at all (unlike every other Christian group on campus!) and the nearest Orthodox church has absolutely no one my age and exhibits no real interest in newcomers at all, which makes attending fairly unappealing.

The elephant in the room, of course, is the relatively open hostility towards LGBT people from the Orthodox churches, especially in zealous online circles. Orthodoxy in Dialogue has been almost the only indication of any LGBT presence in Orthodoxy at all that isn’t treated as a political conspiracy or social ill.

I was reading through your website the other day when I came upon your article Young, LGBTQ, and Stuck at Home. That title, of course, perfectly describes my current situation, as my college has sent almost all students home, and where I had to immediately retreat back into the closet in mid-March instead of late May and faced with the prospect of indefinite life at home with seemingly endless coursework as my only reprieve from the toxicity around me. What struck me especially was this paragraph: Read More


THE LONG PROCESSION by Helen Coats

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{a poem and prayer in time of COVID-19}

Three days in the tomb, the angels in heaven sing,
and three times around the chapel, You
enable us on Earth to glorify You in purity of heart.

Three—a number we can hold in our minds, that
we can count on our fingers. We can praise the Three
in One, speak the language of Trinity even if we
can’t parse all the grammar, can’t break the sentence
down—we can speak Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Read More