Pulse
29 July 2024
One of the most significant virtues that has energised and shaped the Olympics since its founding in 776 BCE is respect. In the spirit of the Olympics, which strives for integrity and excellence, the virtue of respect is extremely important in governing the behaviour not just for the athletes who compete but also for the organisers of the Games.
For the competitors, respect for fellow athletes is a paramount and fundamental aspect of Olympic sportsmanship. Mutual respect is basic as athletes competing in the Games hail from different cultural and social backgrounds, religious beliefs, traditions and practices.
But the importance of respect extends beyond the competitors to the organisers of the Games. This is because in modern times, the Olympics is more than just a series of athletic competitions. It is a truly global spectacle that is viewed by millions throughout the world – an audience of diverse nationalities, cultures and religions.
That is why the parody of Leonardo da Vinci’s The Last Supper at the grand opening ceremony of the Olympic Games in Paris on July 26, 2024, is such a blatant transgression against the spirit and ideals of the Olympics. It is distasteful, insensitive and disrespectful, and reflects poorly on the organisers who allowed it.
During the Opening Ceremony, 18 drag queens re-created the scene of Jesus’ final meal with his disciples just before his crucifixion. The depiction featured half-naked performers behind a long table, with one performer, presumably representing Jesus, standing in the middle with a halo on her head. The drag queens on either side of her can be seen writhing suggestively along the table.
While some are of the view that the scene depicts an ancient Greek Bacchanal, a Roman festival honouring Bacchus, the god of wine and revelry, many regard it as a disdainful portrayal of the Last Supper. That is why the scene has sparked such vigorous backlash on social media.
The journalist Kyle Becker said on X that ‘the 2024 Paris Olympics has gone full Woke dystopian.’ She adds: ‘The opening ceremony was filled with transgender mockery of the Last Supper, the Golden Calf idol, and even the Pale Horse from the Book of Revelation. The Olympics has made it clear that Christian viewers aren’t welcome.’
Radio host Clint Russell concurs: ‘This is crazy. Opening your event by replacing Jesus and the disciples at The Last Supper with men in drag. There are over 2.4 billion Christians on earth and apparently the Olympics wanted to declare loudly to all of them, right out of the gate. Not welcome.’
Seemingly embarrassed by this insensitive scene, Marion Maréchal, a member of the European Parliament, said on X: ‘To all the Christians of the world who are watching the #Paris2024 ceremony and felt insulted by this drag queen parody of the Last Supper, know that it is not France that is speaking but a left-wing minority ready for any provocation. #notinmyname.’
Even Tesla’s CEO, Elon Musk, who describes himself as a ‘cultural Christian’ weighed in on this issue. He writes on X that the performance is ‘extremely disrespectful to Christians,’ adding that ‘Christianity has become toothless.’
If the scene is indeed a parody of the Last Supper, Christians must be aghast by this very blatant and very public bastardisation of the Christian Faith.
The Last Supper that Jesus shared with his disciples has profound significance for Christians. The breaking of bread and the pouring of wine foreshadows Jesus’ sacrifice on the cross of Calvary, where his body is broken and his blood shed, ‘for us and for our salvation’, as the Nicene Creed puts it.
During the Last Supper, Jesus also established the Eucharist and commanded his disciples (and the Church) to ‘do this in memory of me’ (Luke 22:19). The Church is to celebrate the Eucharist for in doing so she proclaims the Lord’s death until he returns at the close of the age (1 Corinthians 11:26).
Gavin Calver, the CEO of the UK Evangelical Alliance, expresses his revulsion at the depiction of the Last Supper calling it ‘utterly insensitive, unnecessary and offensive.’ He adds: ‘… it really was appalling to see Christianity so openly mocked in the opening with the unbelievably crass portrayal of the Last Supper.’
Bishop Robert Barron calls it a ‘gross, flippant mockery’ of the Christian Faith. France, which was once called the eldest daughter of the Church, the Bishop adds, ‘felt evidently, as it’s trying to put its best foot forward, that the right thing to do is to mock this very central moment in Christianity.’
Bishop Barron saw the insidiousness of all of this. ‘The deeply secularist, postmodern society,’ he writes, ‘knows who its enemy is; they’re naming it and we should believe them, they are telling us who it is.’
This provocative display indeed reveals much of Western society and culture, especially that of France. It is a society and culture which has lost its sense of transcendence and its sense of the sacred.
It has embraced a dogmatic and militant secularism that has not only emptied reality of the religious but has become hostile to religion and religious people. Consequently, it has become a society that no longer knows what it means to be respectful.
Respectful of a living religion that has played such a significant role in Western civilisation that without it, it would be difficult to make sense of its scientific culture, its jurisprudence, and the values of human rights, liberty and tolerance that it still cherishes.
Respectful to the 2.4 billion people in the world who celebrate the Eucharist every Sunday in their respective churches and according to their different ecclesiastical traditions, and who believe that Jesus Christ is the Incarnation of the second person of the triune God, the Saviour and Lord of humankind.
Respectful to the 36 million people in France who call themselves Christians.
Once we no longer know what it means to be respectful and how to show respect, something is lost to our humanity and to the human community. We see each other differently. We see ourselves in relation to others differently.
We no longer value the other as another human being. We no longer honour his dignity.
And when that happens, human relationality and society will slide from being kindly and tolerant to being beastly.
Dr Roland Chia is Chew Hock Hin Professor at Trinity Theological College (Singapore) and Theological and Research Advisor of the Ethos Institute for Public Christianity.