First of all, let’s talk about the conclusion. My understanding is that the protagonist is the Messiah, or Jesus descended into the modern age.
The several "contradictory evidence" in the play, his brother's words, and the final death of the little girl with cancer, are actually unable to fundamentally deny that the protagonist is Jesus. As for the cases in the Iranian mental hospital, how to say it can be understood as yes Paranoia, conversely, it can be said that mortals do not believe or understand that Jesus is in the world.
As for "miracles", such as sandstorms driving away the ISS; taking bullets from a young boy in front of a mosque; disappearing inexplicably from an Israeli prison; fearing a Texas tornado and saving the priest's daughter; the priest was planning to burn the church to cheat As a result, it was suddenly hit by a tornado, and the church magically became the only surviving building in the town; walking on the water in front of the Washington Monument; warning to the US President that the latter dreamed that his feet were flooded and turned out to be really big. Flood...Some may be coincidences, such as weather phenomena; some may be illusions, like walking on water and taking bullets. But in fact, the historical Jesus as I understand it is almost a use of some miracles and magic to attract people, but in the final analysis is a social activist leading the Jews against the Romans, so these places are not contradiction.
The Messiah could not simply explain his knowledge of Israeli agents or the personal secrets of CIA female agents.
The scene in the hotel with the prostitute bought by the government made me think of the Magdalene in the New Testament, and Messiah’s words not only “inspired” the prostitute, but even completely After breaking the psychological defense of the government agent responsible for monitoring, the buddy immediately gave up his doubts about the Messiah and went back home.
In the end the plane crashed. Of course, the shepherd kid said that you two were already dead, but you were resurrected by Messiah. There may be some water in this statement. After all, the story earlier also explained that this child is a big talker. But the Messiah not only came down to the village, but he was also intact. . . There was also a bombing attack on the previous mosque. The Palestinian child who had always believed in him did not die. This is not the saying in John’s Gospel: “God loves the world and even gave his only son so that everyone can believe in him. People who are not going to perish, but have eternal life."
I think the screenwriter is deliberately giving you something that appears to be "perjury", but in fact it is still conveying the meaning of miracles.
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