Months after
they seared the American consciousness as an outbreak of purest evil,
the shootings at Columbine High School have been recast as a Christian
morality tale told in rock music and intense, chaotic video that for
months of Friday nights has been drawing thousands of young people to
the sanctuary of a Metairie church.
Conceived originally
as a one-week-end alternative to Halloween, "Beyond the Grave: The Class
of 2000" is still running with the approach of Spring, and , to the surprise
of its creators, still attracting 1,000 to 1,500 mostly young spectators
to its weekly showings at Victory Fellowship Church.
What they get,
many young people say , is church that does not feel like church, although
"Beyond the Grave's" evangelical call to personal conversion is explicit.
Its use of video
and music thudding through a theater-quality sound system speaks their language'
its angst-ridden high school setting, where preps, geeks, Goths and Christians
jostle for handholds on the social ladder, resonates with their world.
It has blood
--- blood pooling under sprawled bodies, blood spattering into shooter's
faces, so much blood that parents with small children are warned before
the lights go down.
And although
it's from an original script fashioned by Victory Fellowship music minister
TyTyler, it includes the now-mythic martyrdom of Cassie Bernall, the Columbine
student who may or may not have declared her belief in Jesus Christ just
before her execution in the school's library.
But with all
its multi-media sophistication, "Beyond the Grave" has a traditional heart:
It ends with a familiar altar call, in which audience members are asked
at the play's end whether, as Bernall reportedly did before her death, they're
prepared to give their lives to Jesus Christ.
Typically, 75
to 100 young people troop up to the stage each Friday said the Rev. Frank
Bailey, Victory Fellowship's pastor.
And every Friday
dozens accept the church's invitation to don some church- provided jeans
and T-shirts and accept baptism on the spot in a pool manned by Victory
Fellowship staffers ready to reap the harvest.
OLD AND NEW
"Beyond the
Grave" is both old and new - old in its traditional message, but also
apparently relatively new in its appropriation of Columbine as a teaching
moment.
Although the
Columbine shootings were a horror everywhere, they quickly acquired
a special resonance among evangelical Christians.
Four of the shooting's
victims were evangelical Christians, and Littleton's Trinity Christian Center,
a non-denominational church, was host to four funerals broadcast live on
CNN.
There, and
at civic memorials after the tragedy that attracted tens of thousands,
evangelical pastors forsook the politely ecumenical language of public
grief and drove home the meaning of the event in their terms: the overhanging
evil of popular culture, the necessity of personal salvation, the heroism
of Christian witness and the certainty of glory for those who hold firm
to Jesus Christ.
In particular
, Bernall's death has become celebrated as a touch stone of faith to
be modeled by young Christians.
"Ive
been to lots of national youth conventions over the last year where
Columbine is always brought up, usually in the context of some kind
of role-playing," said Mike Yaconelli, founder of Youth Specialties,
a for-profit ministry in ElCajon, Calif., that assists church youth
ministers with seminars and resources. "And whenever that happens,
kids immediately calm down and get serious. They connect to that."
A few years
ago, similar morality plays might have used sudden death through a post-prom
traffic accident as the lens through which to examine characters' life
decisions.
One such
staple was "judgment House, " a war horse of the genre produced
for years by and for teens at many churches, said the Rev.Allen jackson,
associate professor of youth ministry at New Orleans Baptist Theological
Seminary.
But at Victory
Fellowship, the crucible is Columbine.
And so far
as they know, that's new, Jackson and Yaconelli said.
DOUBTS OVERCOME
"Early on there were
misgivings", Bailey said.
"There was some sensitivity
from some mothers on staff who were afraid we might be using that tragedy
too much, "he said.
But they were won over to
the view that its audience would pay attention to even a quick sketch
of high school life, and would understand a portrayal of the anger floating
about there.
In time, a cast of about
30 was assembled, mostly teen-age members of the church. Video was shot
and edited in-house. Music was selected.
Six weeks later, on Oct.29,
they went on stage -- and since then haven't been able o close the production,
Tyler said. It's supported by audience donations.
The play will certainly run
through march 10, and perhaps longer, depending on demand, Bailey said.
On that date in march, South African evangelist Rodney Howard Brown,
who has expressed an interest intaking the play on tour with him nationally,
will be in the audience.
SOPHISTICATED PRODUCTION
"Beyond The Grave"
comes from a church community in command of several media.
The 11year old Assemblies
of God church was built to incorporate several technologies into worship.
It boasts a sophisticated sound system, theatrical lighting and the
flexibility to incorporate video projectors onto two large screens.
Shortly after 7:30pm. On Fridays, from the first moment Tyler on piano,
a drummer and bassist begin banging out "They That Wait,"
the crown of teen -agers and many adults hits its feet in the main sanctuary,
hands waving overhead or clapping to the beat.
With the lights down, the
play begins with the hard fact that since 1996 more than 100 students
have been shot in their schools. Over the next 90 minutes, 25 to 30
members of Victory Fellowship's youth group act out six diverse characters
and sketch the tensions among cliques at the school.
Music from groups like Jars
of Clay and The Crystal Method pounds away in the dark between set changes.
The shootings come in an
explosion of on-stage gunfire, augmented by video clips shot next door
at Victory Fellowship's school: quick cuts of screaming, panicked teen-agers
stalked by a handful of pitiless shooters.
Near the end, Bailey appears
on stage in a series of short sermons, each setting the stage for the
coming judgment about to unfold for each of six victims who have either
reached, or fallen short of, heaven.
"They come, often, because
they've heard we have a cool band, or because of the light show or the
smoke machine," Tyler said. "But what they get is an encounter
with God."
"I thought it'd be boring,"
said Julian Sams, 14 who traveled from Slidell to see the play with
friend Herman Brewer and Herman's mother, Ralanda.
"Sometimes I'd go to
sleep in church, but this was entertaining. Well it was entertaining
and serious, both"