Jun
25

“For Greater Glory” – A freedom movie worth watching

By

From the great friend of LCC David Theroux comes a review of the recent movie “For Greater Glory,” which seems of particular value for all of us Christian libertarians out there. I’m excited to see it when it arrives in Austin. Here is what David had to say about it:

——

Of special interest to all freedom lovers is the sweeping, new, epic, independent film directed by Dean Wright, written by Michael Love and starring Andy Garcia, For Greater Glory: The True Story of Cristiada, that has just been released in theaters across the U.S. This story is one with particular interest to Garcia, the Academy Award-nominated, Havana-born actor, director, and producer, who has produced two major films depicting the terror and oppression of communist rule in Cuba (For Love or Country: The Arturo Sandoval Story and The Lost City). For his brilliant and courageous work in defending liberty, the Independent Institute presented him with its Alexis de Tocquevile Award at A Gala for Liberty in 2008. (Here are the presentations by Senior Fellow Alvaro Vargas Llosa and Andy Garcia at the event.)

Headlining a superb cast in For Greater Glory that includes Eva Longoria, Peter O’Toole, Santiago Cabrera, Eduardo Verástegui, Catalina Sandino Moreno, Rubén Blades, Oscar Isaac, and Bruce Greenwood, Garcia portrays Enrique Gorostieta Velarde, the retired army general who from 1927 to 1929 transformed an unorganized, minimally armed, indigenous insurgency into The Cristeros, a powerful, country-wide rebellion against the government of Mexico that had embarked on a campaign to rid the country of Christianity (Law for Reforming the Penal Code) beginning with the persecution of Catholics and ban of public religious practice (including all worship ceremonies, baptisms, weddings and funerals). Priests and religious sisters were denied the right to vote, fined for wearing religious attire, and imprisoned for exercising the right to free speech. When widespread peaceful protest, petitioning of the government, and an economic boycott resulted in 1926, the militant Marxist (i.e., atheist) Mexican president Plutarco Elías Calles denounced the dissent as treasonous and responded brutally with repression, torture, hangings, firing squads, and mass murder by federal troops. In 1927 the National League for the Defense of Religious Liberty recruited Gorostieta to lead the Cristeros against the government forces of Calles, who incidentally was publicly supported in the U.S. by the Ku Klux Klan.

This conflict is actually rooted in the imposed secularization of the Mexican Reforma (1855-1861) which in turn led to the Mexican Revolution of 1910 and the subsequent Mexican Constitution of 1917 and sought to impose a secular, socialist state over the entire country, at the same time the Bolsheviks were doing so in Russia. In imposing a system of compulsory government education, this Constitution reads, “Education services should be secular, and, therefore, free of any religious orientation. . . . The educational services shall be based on scientific progress and shall fight against ignorance, ignorances’s effects, servitudes, fanaticism, and prejudice.”

In my article “Secular Theocracy,” I note how in the modern world secularism has hypocritically been the driving force for intolerance and the creation of nation states, collectivism/statism on a gigantic scale and massive and invasive wars, and the Mexican government is Exhibit A. As Wikipedia correctly notes, to this day and in keeping with its own “secular theocracy”:

The Mexican constitution prohibits outdoor worship, which is only allowed in exceptional circumstances, generally requiring governmental permission. Religious organizations are not permitted to own print or electronic media outlets, governmental permission is required to broadcast religious ceremonies, and ministers are prohibited from being political candidates or holding public office.

And as part of this secular censorship, propaganda, and repression of religious freedom, there is virtually no mention of the Cristero War in the history books, films, and other media of Mexico, the U.S. or elsewhere. Indeed, both most Mexicans and Americans have been utterly unaware of this story in which between 90,000 and 200,000 people were killed (out of only a population of 15 million), and only now with the film with Andy Garcia are they able to learn vital lessons of their own history with more than obvious relevance for us all today. In this regard, the solution to the problem of church-state power is to de-socialize and privatize the public square, not seek to “take it over” and erect yet another theocracy.

Addendum: One aspect of the full story that unfortunately does not get presented in the film is that after the U.S. brokered a flawed peace agreement in 1929, during the following five years and as a secular theocracy the Mexican government broke the agreement by hunting down all of the surviving Cristeros leaders after they were disarmed and massacred them.

Norman Horn

Norman is the founder and editor of LibertarianChristians.com. He holds a PhD in Chemical Engineering from the University of Texas at Austin and a Master of Arts in Theological Studies from the Austin Graduate School of Theology.

More Posts - Website

Follow Me:
TwitterFacebookLinkedInPinterestGoogle PlusYouTubeReddit

Tags: , , , , , ,
Categories : Articles
  • Pingback: Before It's News

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_S6A7M4XI4F7QL4TPQG4P7KF4UU James Farmer

    I recently viewed this movie “For The Greater Glory.” Being a devout Christian (No I’m not
    Roman Catholic), student of history, Second Amendment activist, and an authority on
    firearms I naturally was interested. I knew beforehand the venerable, versatile, and historic 7mm (7×57) Mauser chambered in a bolt action rifle: Spanish Model 1893,
    Chilean Model 1895, 1908 Brazilian Mauser, and/or ’98 German Mauser would be the
    preminent military arm. Developed originally in 1892 the 7mm Mauser (7×57) was
    formerly the quintessential military caliber via both rifles and machineguns for the
    governments (Armies) of Spain, Mexico, Central America, and Latin American countries.
    The 7mm Mauser saw extensive used during the Spanish America War in Cuba (1898),
    South Africa’s Boer War (1899-1902), Mexico’s Revolution (1910-1920), the Spanish
    Civil War (1936-1939), as well as this Christero War (1926-1929). The 7mm Mauser or
    7×57 also saw limited use too I’m sure during both World War 1 (1914-1918) and World
    War II (1939-1945), though certainly not prevalent and widespread as the 8mm Mauser
    (7.92mm), .303 British, .30-06 Springfield, 7.62mm Russian, 6.5mm Italian Carcano,
    and the 6.5mm and 7.7mm Japanese Arisaka.

    It’s ashamed though so much human blood was spilled during the 20th century alone,
    not to mention the innocent masses murdered via the Bolsheviks, Communists, Nazis:
    especially the SS and Gestapo via the Holocaust, Japanese Empire until 1945, as well
    as North Korean, Red Chinese, Viet Cong, etc. Or even during the murderous Armenian
    Genocide in Turkey from 1915-1917 during World War 1 (1914-1918). Aside from
    military conflicts, revolutions, civil wars, etc. where the 7mm Mauser alone saw extensive
    use lets address this same caliber’s practicality as a sporting caliber: especially for North American, African, and Asian big game. For the American hunter the 7mm Mauser
    remains an ideal deer/elk caliber. Chambered in a modern ’98 Mauser based bolt action
    sporter rifle and fitted with a 4x scope a 7mm Mauser will kill anything on the North
    American continent. Domestic and foreign bolt action sporter rifles chambering the 7mm
    Mauser (7×57) include: Winchester’s Model 70, Remington’s Model 700, Ruger’s M-77 and M-77 Mark II, Interarms Mark 5, the British Parker-Hale, Czech 550, and others. The
    late Jack O’Conner (1902-1978) as Arms and Ammo editor of Outdoor Life Magazine
    extolled the 7mm Mauser as a caliber for North American big game hunting. Though
    famed for advocating the .270 Winchester and .30-06 Springfield, Jack O’Conner saw
    much value, practicality, application, and use for this historic 1892 vintate military caliber
    chambered in a modern bolt action sporter rifle. For the average annual deer and elk hunter who desires only to fill the family freezer with fresh venison and elk meat the
    7mm Mauser can’t be beat. The North American big game hunter remains overgunned
    and overscoped anyway! Remember bullet placement, not size, makes the difference.

    These are my sentiments. The Bible states: “When the righteous are in authority, the
    people rejoice: but when the wicked beareth rule, the people mourn.” —- Proverbs 29:2

    Pro-gun institutions embracing the Second Amendment, freedom, morality, decency,
    respect for women, sancity of marriage and family, civic duty, voter education, and the
    preservation of our constitutional republic and Judeo-Christian Biblical heritage include:

    The John Birch Society (www.jbs.org)
    JPFO, Inc. ………………(www.jpfo.org)
    The Constitution Party
    of Oregon  ………………(www.constitutionpartyoregon.net)
    Gun Owners of America (www.gunowners.org)
    News With Views ……..(www.newswithviews.com).
    Paxton Quigley  ……… (www.paxtonquigley.com). Her site addresses women’s safety,
    security, and protection.

Who is behind LCC?

Norman Horn is the creator and primary writer for LCC. Learn a little bit about him in the About Page. You can write him a note or ask a question at the Contact Page. Follow him on Twitter.

Photobucket

×

Need a good read? Check out our bookstore!