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Big Love or Big Liar

To be perfectly frank, Tom Hanks and his company which produces Big Love on HBO has been a constant source of disappointment from what was once a favorite actor.

His show Big Love is showing sacred Mormon temple ordinances, a recreation of sacred temple rooms and airing it on Sunday. That Mr. Hanks and his staff made a promise to never do such a thing is irrelevant. They are Big Liars, clearly. What is more disappointing is that they pulled all their information from an ex-Mormon.

For those of you who do not know, ex-Mormons are the most vitriolic and violent of all our detractors. It's disappointing that Mr. Hanks' and his people didn't go to reliable sources, but rather to a source tainted by his perception of his or her former church. Why they would refuse to go to reliable sources is beyond me. In addition, their show is not even about Mormons. It is about polygamists who separated from the Church a long time ago. I don't know why or what The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has to do with what Hanks is portraying. But he has adamantly stated that he believes his show to be about real Mormons rather than the pretenders.

All this aside, I am not calling for a boycott of Mr. Hanks movies or his television show. I personally will be not be giving him anymore of my hard-earned money, but I do not ask that you follow my example.

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has posted the following in response to the producers of Big Love going back on their word:

SALT LAKE CITY 9 March 2009 Like other large faith groups, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints sometimes finds itself on the receiving end of attention from Hollywood or Broadway, television series or books, and the news media. Sometimes depictions of the Church and its people are quite accurate. Sometimes the images are false or play to stereotypes. Occasionally, they are in appallingly bad taste.

As Catholics, Jews and Muslims have known for centuries, such attention is inevitable once an institution or faith group reaches a size or prominence sufficient to attract notice. Yet Latter-day Saints – sometimes known as Mormons - still wonder whether and how they should respond when news or entertainment media insensitively trivialize or misrepresent sacred beliefs or practices.

Church members are about to face that question again. Before the first season of the HBO series Big Love aired more than two years ago, the show’s creators and HBO executives assured the Church that the series wouldn’t be about Mormons. However, Internet references to Big Love indicate that more and more Mormon themes are now being woven into the show and that the characters are often unsympathetic figures who come across as narrow and self-righteous. And according to TV Guide, it now seems the show’s writers are to depict what they understand to be sacred temple ceremonies.

Certainly Church members are offended when their most sacred practices are misrepresented or presented without context or understanding. Last week some Church members began e-mail chains calling for cancellations of subscriptions to AOL, which, like HBO, is owned by Time Warner. Certainly such a boycott by hundreds of thousands of computer-savvy Latter-day Saints could have an economic impact on the company. Individual Latter-day Saints have the right to take such actions if they choose.

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints as an institution does not call for boycotts. Such a step would simply generate the kind of controversy that the media loves and in the end would increase audiences for the series. As Elder M. Russell Ballard and Elder Robert D. Hales of the Council of the Twelve Apostles have both said recently, when expressing themselves in the public arena, Latter-day Saints should conduct themselves with dignity and thoughtfulness.

Not only is this the model that Jesus Christ taught and demonstrated in his own life, but it also reflects the reality of the strength and maturity of Church members today. As someone recently said, “This isn’t 1830, and there aren’t just six of us anymore.” In other words, with a global membership of thirteen and a half million there is no need to feel defensive when the Church is moving forward so rapidly. The Church’s strength is in its faithful members in 170-plus countries, and there is no evidence that extreme misrepresentations in the media that appeal only to a narrow audience have any long-term negative effect on the Church.

Examples:

* During the Mitt Romney election campaign for the presidency of the United States, commentator Lawrence O’Donnell hurled abuse at the Church in a television moment that became known among many Church members as “the O’Donnell rant.” Today, his statements are remembered only as a testament to intolerance and ignorance. They had no effect on the Church that can be measured.

* When the comedy writers for South Park produced a gross portrayal of Church history, individual Church members no doubt felt uncomfortable. But once again it inflicted no perceptible or lasting damage to a church that is growing by at least a quarter of a million new members every year.

* When an independent film company produced a grossly distorted version of the Mountain Meadows Massacre two years ago, the Church ignored it. Perhaps partly as a result of that refusal to engender the controversy that the producers hoped for, the movie flopped at the box office and lost millions.

* In recent months, some gay activists have barraged the media with accusations about “hateful” attitudes of Latter-day Saints in supporting Proposition 8 in California, which maintained the traditional definition of marriage. They even organized a protest march around the Salt Lake Temple. Again, the Church has refused to be goaded into a Mormons versus gays battle and has simply stated its position in tones that are reasonable and respectful. Meanwhile, missionary work and Church members in California remain as robust and vibrant as ever, and support for the Church has come from many unexpected quarters — including some former critics and other churches.

Now comes another series of Big Love, and despite earlier assurances from HBO it once again blurs the distinctions between The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and the show’s fictional non-Mormon characters and their practices. Such things say much more about the insensitivities of writers, producers and TV executives than they say about Latter-day Saints.

If the Church allowed critics and opponents to choose the ground on which its battles are fought, it would risk being distracted from the focus and mission it has pursued successfully for nearly 180 years. Instead, the Church itself will determine its own course as it continues to preach the restored gospel of Jesus Christ throughout the world.

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Big Love or Big Liar Big Love or Big Liar Reviewed by Unknown on Tuesday, March 10, 2009 Rating: 5

13 comments:

  1. Simply said. God will not be mocked.

    I am just not into Hollywood anymore. Seriously. My like for it is over.

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  2. Tom Hanks is more than just a disappointment. I just don't know what the right word is that would be descriptive enought that he's become. I will never see another product or production sanctioned by Tom Hanks again.

    Big Disappointment. (no pun intended)

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  3. Absolutely fabulous commentary, Candace. Thank you for your thoughtful response to what is obviously a vitriolic backlash against the members of the church supporting traditional marriage.

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  4. I haven't been a Tom Hanks fan for years. I'm sure he's more interested in ratings than in truth. He wants the money more than the truth, otherwise he would've checked his facts. He and his group are only adding to the rumors about the Church, but in the end they will be held accountable for it. Their "victory" will be short-lived because God will not be mocked.

    What a shame that talented people waste that talent on perpetuating stereotypes and prejudice.

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  5. Great post as usual. I won't be seeing anything with Tom Hanks in it, that's for sure.

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  6. I did write to HBO before I found the statement given by the church. I asked them to consider that they were desecrating something sacred for entertainment purposes but I did not threaten to boycott. Truth is I haven't watched anything on HBO in years. I don't plan on it because even regular TV is not worth watching nowadays. It's so offensive. I am very disappointed however that one of my all time favorite actors is the cause of this. I am sad.

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  7. When he came out with that statement about the church and proposition 8, I was very disappointed. I didn't realize he was the producer behind Big Love. I've VERY disappointed, and won't be able to look at him in the same way again. sigh.

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  8. Your comment about ex-Mormons being the most vitriolic and violent toward the church is consistent with the scriptures and with what I have experienced from people who fall into apostasy. Alma 24:30 says:

    And thus we can plainly discern, that after a people have been once enlightened by the Spirit of God, and have had great knowledge of things pertaining to righteousness, and then have fallen away into sin and transgression, they become more hardened, and thus their state becomes worse than though they had never known these things.

    I recently attended a missionary fireside with Elder L. Tom Perry. He said that the church had hired an independent research firm to gather statistic about non-members' knowledge of the church. One of those statistics indicated that 47% of those who know of the church had a negative view of Mormons. We can blame Hollywood and the false doctrines of priestcraft to some extent. But we must be good ambassadors of the gospel and all that it offers. That is what is most effective at not only diffusing the Hollywood and media attempts to bring the church into disrepute, but in sharing the good things of the gospel. We can't stop at damage control, we must share the positive aspects. This is important because Satan will try even harder to thwart the work of the church in the years to come. We need to counter those attacks in a Christlike way. Good post, Candace.

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  9. Never liked Tom Hanks anyway, and this confirms even more how I already thought about him.
    I am not a member of the LDS Church, but I always feel that I need to "defend" it. I do not know (yet) what to say when people say false/wrong things about the Church, but it makes me feel upset, powerless and angry sometimes.
    This whole Big Love thing, tells us more about Mr. Hanks than it does about the truth about the Church. We all know better, and at least WE really know what Big Love REALLY is! :p
    X

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  10. I am very disappointed in Mr. Hanks. He has always been a favorite of mine, but now I don't think I can watch his movies anymore. I just can't "view" him in the same light. How sad.

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  11. Mr. Hanks has been a dispappointment ever since he starred in Forrest Gump. To be honest though, I'd never heard of "Big Love" until this week. It's been out for two years already? Wow! Anyway, I think everyone knows that it's not about the true church, but about one of the splinter groups that still practices polygamy. On the positive side, it's made me want to go study the history of polygamy in the true church, starting back with Joseph Smith who supposedly had over 25 wives, some still married to other men. I didn't know that either!

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  12. Joseph Smith was never married to other women who were currently married to other men. He was married to widows. He was married to women whose husbands abandoned them.

    Although, after he died, there were a lot of women who wanted to sealed to him in the hereafter while remaining married to their husband here on earth. Brigham Young eventually put a stop to that.

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  13. Tom Hanks puts this brouhaha into perspective (and waxes prophetic) at the 3rd season premiere of Big Love:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u7JgK_mmEBk

    "There's gonna be lies, and secrets, and discoveries, and problems. Television!"

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