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           Mark C. Pilkinton, Ph.D.University of Notre Dame
 The True Temptation of Christ:"To Suffyr temptacion it is grett peyn"
  Reaction 
        to the screening of the film, The Last Temptation of Christ, directed 
        by Martin Scorsese and based on the Kazantzakis novel of the same name, 
        can be vehemently negative. Those who oppose the film (most of whom steadfastly 
        refused to see it) on the grounds that it is "blasphemous" probably 
        do not realize that Scorsese continued and re-affirmed, in a new medium, 
        a centuries-old tradition established in the medieval English Cyclic drama 
        wherein The Temptation of Christ is the true temptation of a living, breathing 
        human being. Scorsese reproduces faithfully the medieval thesis demonstrated 
        most clearly in the N-Town cycle but one which is present in all the extant 
        English cycles, a thesis which modern directors all too often ignore and, 
        in so doing, inevitably stage a flat, boring depiction of the devil working 
        feverishly to tempt an all-divine Christ who is not in the least interested 
        in anything the devil has to offer.(1) Indeed, The Temptation of Christ, 
        performed by the Guild of Freemen in York, England, on Sunday, 12 July 
        1998, with ten other plays of the larger York Cycle at five different 
        stations under the title "York Mystery Plays 1998," unfortunately 
        fell into this category of a "false" temptation, an all too 
        typical interpretation by modern directors of this important struggle 
        between good and evil. At York, the devil hopelessly attempted to tempt 
        a defiantly untemptable and utterly divine Christ, a character in whom 
        we as audience members never saw Jesus the man struggling to remain true 
        to cosmic history.
   If 
        the film version of The Last Temptation of Christ is blasphemy 
        today, then the N-Town pageant of The Temptation of Christ was also blasphemy 
        during the nearly two centuries of its [page 
        136] "run."(2) Both play and film visually depict 
        a genuine, true temptation of a real human being (who also happens to 
        be God) by a disguised, deceitful, and mendacious devil, the same devil 
        who used identical techniques successfully to tempt the first human beings, 
        Adam and Eve, to commit original sin. The human/God, Jesus Christ, ultimately 
        musters the strength necessary to reject this demonic temptation in both 
        medieval cyclic drama and modern film, and, as a result, fulfills biblical 
        prophecy and becomes the means of salvation for all humanity forever.   The 
        biblical account of the Temptation appears in Matthew 4:1-11 and in Luke 
        4:1-13. The medieval cyclic playwrights follow the sequence described 
        in Matthew rather than in Luke, i.e., (1) turning stones to bread (gluttony), 
        (2) jumping from the parapet (vainglory), and (3) rule of the world through 
        supplication to Satan (covetousness). Scorsese includes additional extra-biblical 
        demonic temptation scenes, including the very controversial "last 
        temptation" where the crucified Christ is tempted down from the Cross 
        to take a fully human life, replete with multiple wives, children, and 
        a natural death in old age.   Of 
        the extant English cycles, the N-Town playwright best depicts a true temptation 
        by first staging a conference between Satan and two other high-ranking 
        officers of hell, Beelzebub and Belial. In his opening speech, Satan says 
        he has "grett dowte" (193, 4) which centers around the true 
        identity and future intentions of Jesus:  
         The dowte _at I haue it is of cryst i-wysborn he was in bedleem as it is seyd
 And many a man wenyth _at goddys sone he is
 (194, 14-6)
  Satan asks point-blank for advice: "In _is grett 
        dowte what is best to do?" (194, 28). He goes on to describe his 
        apprehensions for the future of hell, should Jesus be God's son, "All 
        our gode days _an Xulde sone be goo" (194, 33).   Belial 
        then proposes the actual temptation of Jesus, "with sotyl whylys 
        if _at _ou may / A-say to make hym to don A-mys" (195, 42-3). Beelzebub 
        advises narrowing the Temptation to specific sins and creates the triune 
        (and biblically correct) number of "synnys thre" (195, 50). 
        Beelzebub alludes, of course, to the three sins Adam and Eve committed 
        when they ate the [page 137] fruit 
        of the tree of knowledge--gluttony, vainglory, and covetousness--and which 
        successfully brought about the Fall of Humanity.   Satan 
        takes his minions' advice at face value and declares, "I xal apposyn 
        hym [Christ] with-inne A tyde" (195, 47). Satan leaves for earth 
        as Beelzebub tells him that Lucifer "in helle so derke" (195, 
        57) sends his blessing; Belial says that "All _e deuelys _at ben 
        in helle / shul pray to Mahound" (195, 62-3), one of the many anti-infidel 
        comments in the cycle, to speed Satan's journey and to provide him spiritual 
        comfort as he attempts to carry out what will be a most difficult task, 
        on which, when it fails, sets in motion the Crucifixion.   The 
        N-Town dramatist deals very satisfactorily with the gluttony scene and 
        in so doing begins to establish a true, genuine temptation. He inserts 
        a speech by Jesus describing hunger and how it might be satiated by a 
        morsel of bread. Jesus says:  
         . . . bred haue I non myn hungyr for to slakeA lytel of a loof relese myn hungyr myght
 but mursese haue I non my comforte for to make.
 (195, 71-3)
  When Satan proposes that Jesus "turne these flyntys. 
        . . ffrom Arde stonys to tendyr brede," (196, 81-2) the audience 
        knows that bread is paramount in Jesus' thoughts. Satan repeats his proposal 
        three times in twelve lines, pounding home the thought, "Bread, bread, 
        bread--if you are God, you can make it and satiate your physical, human 
        hunger!" The playwright thus skillfully produces a genuine temptation 
        to commit sin. By constructing a gluttony scene which fuses biblical plot 
        to the cyclic requirement of relating Adam's fall to Christ's temptation, 
        the N-Town pageant retains at the same time the most important aspect 
        of all, the depiction of a believable temptation to commit sin.   The 
        temptation at the pinnacle of the temple follows the gluttony scene. To 
        jump from the pinnacle is to produce a fall, and if Jesus is not the Son 
        of God, then the physical fall will kill him, and Satan will take his 
        soul to hell. If Jesus is the Son of God, then to do Satan's bidding--to 
        be guilty of vainglory--will precipitate a "fall" more cosmic 
        in nature. The N-Town Satan takes Jesus to the pinnacle, where he chides 
        him to "preue what _at _ou be" (197, 111). Jesus refuses to 
        jump and rebukes Satan for asking him to tempt God.   [page 
        138] Having failed in his first two attempts, Satan goes all 
        out and offers Jesus dominion over the world in exchange for allegiance 
        to him. Jesus' refusal to accept the offer confuses Satan in the N-Town 
        pageant and causes him to despair. Satan has failed to tempt Jesus to 
        commit sin, and he still does not know anything definite about Jesus' 
        true nature.   Jesus 
        in the N-Town pageant explains directly to the audience that he suffered 
        the Temptation "to teche _e how _ou xalt rewle the / Whan _e devylle 
        tothe the Assayle" (200, 203-4), that is, to teach humanity how to 
        exercise self control; Jesus further admonishes mankind to resist the 
        devil even though he admits, apropos to the thesis of this paper, that 
        "To Suffyr temptacion it is grett peyn" (200, 209). Modern productions 
        fail when they ignore Christ's own recognition of the "peyn" 
        involved in resisting demonic temptation by not letting the audience see, 
        feel, and sense the genuine "peyn" Christ the man suffers at 
        each step of The Temptation.   The 
        film effectively carries the true temptation one step further but does 
        so within a tradition of true temptation that has precedent in the medieval 
        drama going back to the fourteenth century. In the film, we see no devils 
        in hell conspiring; the focus is much more on Jesus and his personal dilemma. 
        Is he being tempted by the devil to claim to be the Messiah? Is it God 
        talking to him, or is it the devil in disguise? Who comes to him in the 
        desert, God, the devil, or both? (It turns out both do.) Perseverance 
        ultimately makes it clear who is God and who is the devil, and the serpent 
        imagery clearly and consistently clues the audience in to demonic origin. 
        The connection between God (who is patently good) and the devil (who is 
        patently evil) is very close in this film, and it is not always immediately 
        clear to Jesus (or to the audience) by whom he is being advised. In the 
        final "last temptation," not to be the Messiah but to be "just" 
        a man, the demonic angel claims to be of God and is disguised as a sweet, 
        innocent child. Only when she says, "There is only one woman, but 
        they have many faces," does the audience know for sure she is not 
        of God, although her bringing Christ down from the cross, with references 
        to Abraham ("You have done enough; you have met the test!"), 
        should be a clue to all of us that something is very wrong. The hallucination 
        -- is it real? -- makes it clear that the "last temptation" 
        to be a man only instead of the Messiah is the most insidious temptation 
        of all, because it deprives humanity forever of the possibility for salvation. 
        The preaching will go on and the myth of Christ will be created by Saul/Paul, 
        but true salvation will be impossible in a world where Jesus did not die 
        on the cross for the sins of [page 139] humanity. 
        Jesus finally realizes what he must do and leaves this hallucinatory, 
        demonic, futuristic, alternative world to return to the cross to fulfill 
        the demands of prophecy and to create cosmic history as Christians believe 
        it to be.   If 
        Adam's fall prefigures the Temptation, then Satan uses established, successful 
        methods to secure Christ's downfall. He fails, and the relationship of 
        God both to humanity and to Satan begins to dance. In both play and film, 
        Jesus (God as man) rebukes Satan and initiates the reversal that culminates 
        in the freeing of the souls from hell at the Harrowing. This failure of 
        demonic power against one man who is more than one man provides the mirror 
        into which all humanity can look. If humanity freely wills it, humanity 
        too can cause the devil to fail. The Temptation directs mankind along 
        a new route--one that will provide an alternative to the guaranteed hellish 
        damnation of all who have died since the Fall of Man. The newly baptized 
        Jesus rebukes Satan and, in so doing, the certain damnation inherent to 
        Adam's original disobedience to God fades.   Having 
        failed, Satan returns to hell still unsure of Christ's true nature. Insulted 
        and discouraged, he immediately begins to work clandestinely to bring 
        about the death of Corpus Christi, so that he can deal directly with Anima 
        Christi in hell. In the play, the Temptation sets the stage for the next 
        major confrontation between the immortal forces of good and evil, a confrontation 
        which breaks down hell's gates, releases numerous souls, and sends Satan 
        sprawling into hell's deepest pit where he will join Lucifer for a millennium. 
        In the film, the "last temptation" is a bold attempt to prevent 
        the Harrowing, but it, too, is unsuccessful. Lucifer's prologue in Passion 
        Play, I, of the N-Town cycle points up well the significance of the Temptation 
        to later events on Calvary and at the gates of limbo. Speaking of his 
        failure to corrupt Jesus, he says: "His Answerys were mervelous. 
        I knew not his intencion / nevyr I had myn intent" (226, 31-2). Before 
        the Temptation onwards, the devil's inability to control temporal events 
        grows until he finally arrives at a disadvantageous, defensive position 
        from which he never fully recovers. The Temptation of Christ marks the 
        beginning of the end of an irrevocably condemned mankind. In the film, 
        the "last temptation" marks the last gasp of a hugely powerful 
        diablerie that has in its grasp all the souls of all the humans who have 
        ever died. When the "last temptation" fails, the salvation of 
        humanity becomes possible, and the cosmos is forever changed as the Atonement, 
        the reconciliation between God and humanity brought about by the death 
        of Christ on the cross, becomes not only possible but palpable.   [page 
        140] Why must "The Temptation of Christ," in both 
        medieval pageant and modern film, depict a true temptation? Can we as 
        audience members have our faith reaffirmed just as surely with a perfunctory 
        catechistic temptation scene depicting facile rejections of sin by a perfect 
        man/God? Why have artists for over 500 years created an agonized Christ 
        wrestling with his own very human free will and visceral needs who nevertheless 
        ultimately, if even at the very last moment, "does the right thing" 
        and rejects demonic temptation on behalf of humanity's eternal salvation? 
        I offer three explanations.   First, 
        the audience must understand the true humanity of Christ and his genuine 
        ability and, indeed, requirement to exercise free will. A perfect unhuman 
        God merely inhabiting a human body is very boring dramatically because 
        no conflict can exist or be created, no development of character is possible, 
        no decision making process can occur, and no human exercise of free will 
        takes place in the face of absolute good and evil. God the Father is one 
        of the most dramatically uninteresting characters in literature when he 
        is omnipotent, omniscient, and omnipresent (not to mention patently serious). 
        The doctrine of free will must be seen to work for all humans, even god-humans. 
        Was Christ simply programmed to fulfill prophecy or did he make decisions, 
        really tough decisions, which ultimately fulfill prophecy? Jesus the man 
        must exercise as much freedom as any other human has, and he does so in 
        both the cyclic drama and in the Scorsese film.   Secondly, 
        for God's time on earth as Christ to have meaning, Jesus the man must 
        experience being truly human, with all ramifications and complexities, 
        including the experience of true temptation to commit evil. The "soft" 
        but no less deadly sins of Lechery, Gluttony, and Sloth, make the Mary 
        Magdalene sequences in the film both necessary and believable. The body 
        has to want to sin for the rejection of sin to have meaning. Jesus' ultimate 
        rejection of genuine demonic temptation serves to inspire all mortal human 
        beings. We humans can be tempted and yet can persevere and can rise above 
        it. There is no sin in being tempted; the sin is in giving in to temptation. 
        And even if humans give in to sin through their inherent human weakness 
        (as Adam and Eve so dramatically do at The Fall), Christ's demonstrated 
        strength against the devil, as depicted in both pageant and film, makes 
        salvation a continuing option.   [page 
        141] Third, when Jesus the human being overcomes and rejects 
        real temptation in both film and play (the triumph of good over evil through 
        the exercise of free will), he elevates all of humanity. Jesus the man 
        consciously rejects demonic temptation and does what is "right," 
        what he must do both to live with his human conscience on earth and to 
        edify his soul and, thus by extension, to edify all souls of all humanity 
        throughout eternity.   Both 
        play and film reaffirm the faith by giving the audience a deeper understanding 
        of both Christ's humanity and the true commitment God made to humanity 
        when he came to earth as Jesus. Half a millennium apart, both play and 
        film artistically and creatively deal with profound issues and concerns 
        shared by Christians everywhere. Endnotes 
        Martin Scorsese, dir., 
            The Last Temptation of Christ, Universal Pictures, 1988. Screened 
          at the University of Notre Dame 29-30 September 1990. The tumult from 
          this screening continued for the entire academic year, although I must 
          point out the administration never wavered in its support of the screening 
          of the film. Also see Nikos Kazantzakis, The Last Temptation of Christ, 
          Trans. P. A. Bien (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1960), on which the 
          film is based.
 I am indebted both to the Institute for Scholarship in the Liberal Arts 
          (ISLA) and the Department of Film, Television, and Theatre at the University 
          of Notre Dame (both in the College of Arts and Letters) for financial 
          support which permitted me to attend the plays from the York Cycle, 
          performed in York, England, in the summer of 1998.
 
 This article has its origins in a paper presented at the Association 
          for theatre in Higher Education National Conference, Chicago, Illinois, 
          August 1994, presented is a panel sponsored by the Religion and Theatre 
          Focus Group.
 
 
 The N-Town cycle has also 
          been labeled, at differing times in its history, the Ludus Coventriae, 
          the Hegge Cycle, and the Lincoln cycle. References to the N-Town cycle 
          are from K.S. Block, ed., Ludus Coventriae, EETS, ES, 120 (1922; rpt. 
          London: Oxford Univ. Press, 1960) and occur parenthetically in the text. |