Respect is a movie about the
repercussions in the life of a person sexually exploited and sinned against by
another.
The
biblical passage that kept recurring in my mind afterwards was the Apostle
Paul’s First Letter to the Thessalonians, exhorting them to please God by doing
God’s will, to become holy in thought and action, by keeping away from sexual
immorality. How to do that? By exercising control over one’s own “vessel” (or
body) “in holiness and honor, not with lustful passion, like the Gentiles who
do not know God; that no one wrong or exploit a brother or sister in this
matter, because the Lord is an avenger in all these things, just as we have
already told you beforehand and solemnly warned you. For God did not call us to
impurity but in holiness” (1 Thess. 4:3-7 NRSV). Paul emphasizes the
responsibility of the one committing sexual immorality. The movie focuses on
the person wronged, or sinned against, and exploited or taken advantage of.
The
talented Aretha Franklin (played effectively by Jennifer Hudson), reared in a
musical family, is mentored by her father, C.L. Franklin (well played by Forest
Whitaker) and awakened to sing before his parties attended by famous musical
performers and noted political celebrities. The actress (Skye Dakota Turner)
who portrays Aretha as a child does a wonderful job of presenting a delightful,
confident, talented, and innocent child. But one night, unknown to the father,
a guest slips into her bedroom and sexually molests her. Then Aretha’s mother
dies. This disturbs the child so much that she refuses to talk or sing. She
never tells who molested her.[2]
As a result of her introverted response, Aretha becomes a person damaged
throughout her life. She accepts the control of her father and then abuse by
her first husband, Ted White (played successfully by Marlon Wayans), and
becomes sexually permissive herself, and eventually self-medicates with
alcoholic abuse. Innocence lost brings a powerful negative aftermath.
But,
at the end, after a poignant prayer to God, Aretha turns back to the church to
help her transform her life. Her decision is her turning point. Her producer
offers to put her in a program to deal with her alcoholism, but she is firm
that she will create her own program wherein God and the church must be the
strongest part of her recovery. The result renovates her life and produces her
best-selling gospel album “Amazing Grace.”
The
movie has sadness and trauma mixed together with Aretha’s musical triumphs. The
singing by actress Jennifer Hudson is marvelous. The movie might suggest that
Aretha Franklin’s pain fueled her singing. We may also say that her musical
gifts of singing, arranging, writing, and playing progressed her triumphs further
despite her pain.
The
movie is a text of terror with a positive Christian ending. Phyllis Trible
popularized the term “text of terror” for those biblical accounts that describe
the tragic stories of women, such as Tamar, daughter of King David, raped by Amnon
(2 Samuel 13).[3] As
ministers, Bill and I hear heart rendering stories of such abuse. We recognize
the reality in this depiction, responsibly portrayed in the movie. The incidents
moved at the pace of real life. The scenes are not presented salaciously, but
we viewers were still overwhelmed by the horror. In the ministry, we’ve learned
that young girls who have been raped may become sexually promiscuous because
they no longer see themselves as pure and their identity is shattered. They
used to be special, but now to them that self is gone.
If anyone should imagine that sexual abuse of a child, if not discovered at the time, has no or little lasting effect, this movie is the one to watch. We are all reminded not to live like those without any guiding principles, but instead to treat our own bodies and those of others as holy vessels that honor and please God.
Aida
[1]https://www.google.com/search?rlz=1C1GCEV_enUS858US858&source=univ&tbm=isch&q=aretha+franklin+movie+respect+official+site+images&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwiQt8z2pLbyAhVhMVkFHVn-BY8Q7Al6BAgVEC8&biw=1024&bih=464#imgrc=3-VAtjwhl1Q1JM.
[2]
Late in life Aretha does disclose the name in a handwritten will. “Aretha
Franklin,” https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aretha_Franklin,
accessed 16 August 2021.
[3]
Phyllis Trible, Texts of Terror: Literary-Feminist Readings of Biblical
Narratives (Philadelphia: Fortress, 1984).
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