Constantine's Sword (film) explained

Constantine's Sword
Director:Oren Jacoby
Producer:Mick Garris
Robb Idels
John Landis
Narrator:Amanda Pays
Cinematography:Robert Richman
Editing:Kate Hirson
Runtime:93 minutes
Country:United States

James Carroll's Constantine's Sword, or Constantine's Sword, is a 2007 premised documentary film on the relationship between the Catholic Church and Jews. Directed and produced by Oscar-nominated filmmaker Oren Jacoby, the film is inspired by former priest James P. Carroll's 2001 book Constantine's Sword.[1] [2]

Synopsis

The title page of this film shows the shadow of a cross, with "No war is holy" written across the transept. Constantine’s Sword is the story of James P. Carroll's journey to uncover the roots of war. Carroll, a former Catholic priest whose father (Joseph Carroll) was a famous Air Force general, implies that there has been a relationship between religiously inspired violence and war, beginning with the adoption of Christianity by the Roman Emperor Constantine I in 312 AD. The counter balance to this view that most wars are political or economic in nature is not discussed, nor are the circumstances of attacks on European Christendom through the ages by hostile forces, secular or alien religions. Constantine was convinced that he had won a battle because he had followed the instructions of a vision, to inscribe a sign of the cross (the Labarum) on the shields of his soldiers. At the time most of Constantine's legionaries were Christians themselves including Constantine's mother St. Helena. In Carroll's view, this event marked the beginning of an unholy alliance between the military and the Church regardless of the fact that most members of a military belong to that particular country's religion. Carroll's thesis is explained as his father's supposed translation to Carroll's question as a boy of what the letters IHS stood for in churches, being the IHS monogram for the name of Jesus, as Constantine's vision of "In hoc signo vinces", "in this sign you will conquer", giving a fabricated union of state military with church dogma.

Carroll focuses on Catholic and evangelical anti-Judaism, and invokes the cross as a symbol of the long history of Christian xenophobic violence against Jews and non-Christians,[3] [4] from the Crusades, through the Roman Inquisition and the creation of the Jewish ghetto, to the Holocaust. Carroll also charges that there is an ongoing evangelical infiltration of the U.S. military, and that this has had negative consequences for U.S. foreign policy. The film's final chapter, "No war is holy", concludes with views of military cemeteries as Aaron Neville sings "With God On Our Side".

Technical details

See also

References

  1. Web site: Synopsis . constantinessword.com . 2012-01-07.
  2. Web site: Woodstock Film Festival . Woodstock Film Festival . 2007-10-14 . 2012-01-07.
  3. http://www.hollywoodjesus.com/movieDetail.cfm/i/61D3FDB1-C43A-34AD-1D9440BEF01F9779 Constantine's Sword (2008)
  4. Chris Barsanti. Constantine's Sword film review at Filmcritic.com.

External links