When "The Cross: The Arthur Blessitt Story" opens in some 220 theaters across the U.S. on March
27, filmmaker Matthew Crouch is confident the unique documentary will
reach an audience beyond its Christian base. Time will tell, but the
saga does seem to be one that could spark the curiosity of anyone,
regardless of belief.
Blessitt is the Guinness Book of World Records
record holder for World's Longest Walk: 38,102 Miles, 315 Countries and
Major Island groups over 40 years. He carried a replica of Jesus'
cross on his shoulder the entire time (fortunately, Blessitt's had a
wheel on the bottom).
Along the way, he walked amid crowds of tens of
thousands in India -- people who all wanted to touch the cross. He
walked through deserts and mountain wilderness alone. He was arrested
many times. He prayed with Yasser Arafat -- who embraced him on both
cheeks -- in the midst of the Israeli-Lebanon conflict, a scene
captured by CNN cameras and Peter Arnett. He was in Northern Ireland
walking side by side with Billy Graham when the Catholic-Protestant
conflict there escalated to terrorist bombings.
Why?
According to
Crouch, who is the youngest son of Trinity Broadcasting Network
founders Paul and Jan Crouch, Blessitt aims to reinterpret the symbol
of the cross as "a message of hope, love and unity -- not divisiveness,
death and killing. And, everyone can get behind that."
Blessitt is
well-known in the Christian community, by the likes of Rick Warren and
Jim Reeve, and, of course, the Crouch family. Their history with
Blessitt goes back to the days he was known as The Minister of the
Sunset Strip -- when Blessitt came to Hollywood from Mississippi in
hopes of saving the souls of hippies, druggies and assorted other
sinners in the purple haze-covered1960s, when there were love-ins in
Griffith Park and a LSD tabs for sale on Hollywood Blvd.
Long haired,
bearded, jeans-wearing Blessitt became a controversial figure, Matt
Crouch recalls, for walking right into strip clubs and houses of
prostitution and witnessing for the Lord -- something few evangelicals
of the day would have ever considered doing, Crouch says. He chained
himself to a cross and walked down Hollywood Blvd.
"My father
thought he was kind of a kook," Crouch recalls.
But, the senior Crouch
did eventually invite Blessitt to join him, live on the air.
"My
dad said, 'Are you telling me you put that big cross on your shoulder
and go out with it?' And, Arthur said, 'Yeah. Every week.' And, Dad
said, 'Can I go with you some time?' And, Arthur said, 'How about
tomorrow night?'"
They made plans to meet at the most famous
intersection in town -- Hollywood and Vine -- at 7 o'clock. Matt was
then a 16-year-old operating the camera. They arrived to find a throng
he says police estimated at 15,000 on the scene. Traffic was backed up
to the freeway.
Since then, the men have been friends, and TBN has
kept tabs on Blessitt throughout his world-wide journey, through war
zones and countries known for hostility toward Christianity -- from the
former Soviet Union to Iran in 1997. Blessitt reached his final
destination, Zanzibar, off the coast of Africa, last summer.
According
to Crouch, initially, he was going to simply update and extend a previous
documentary on Blessitt. Then, it occurred to him to do a new film, a
theatrical film -- an event film. He mentioned the idea to Blessitt, and
told him he'd need a half-million dollars' seed money to start -- and asked
him, "Do you know anyone who might help with the budget?" He thought about
it and said, "Maybe."
The next day, Crouch found himself on the phone with
a San Antonio-based businessman who offered to put up $250,000 if Paul
Crouch would kick in a like amount. It was agreed, and Matt dove right in
to work. Such instant funding would strike most Hollywood filmmakers
as something requiring divine intervention, to say the least.
Crouch went through
some 160 hours of footage on Blessitt to make the 90-minute
documentary, which he narrated himself. According to him, "It's a
roller-coaster ride of emotions, extreme laughter to sorrow and
everything in-between. I mean, strip away the religious context and
you have this amazing story of a man who lives a truly dynamic life.
He'd arrive in a country like Sierra Leone with $50 and no contacts in
the days before cell phones, and somehow manage to make it.
So, his
story is inspiring and challenging -- whatever it is inside of you that
you feel you're meant to do, go for it. Just do it! If ever there
was a poster guy for Nike's slogan, it's him."
Blessitt's book of
"The Cross" is already in release. The fim, "The Cross: The Arthur Blessitt Story" gets its
premiere at Grauman's Chinese Theater on March 24, appropriately right
in his old stomping grounds.
Stacy Jenel Smith