• Home
  • Latest Writing
  • About
  • Book
  • Contact
Menu

KEN CHITWOOD

Religion | Reporting | Public Theology
  • Home
  • Latest Writing
  • About
  • Book
  • Contact
“The person who knows only one religion, knows none”
— Max Müller
Photo courtesy Oberammergau Passionspiele, via Christianitytoday.com.

Photo courtesy Oberammergau Passionspiele, via Christianitytoday.com.

Growing Hair for Jesus, German Village Plans for 2022

March 11, 2021

Jesus is thrilled to see you again in May 2022. 

Or, at least, Frederik Mayet, the man who will play Jesus in the 42nd Oberammergau Passion Play season next year,  is excited to welcome attendees — many of them pilgrims — back to his village, after a two-year postponement of the play due to the coronavirus.

The play started in 1633, is a reenactment of the suffering, death, and resurrection of Jesus, with performances taking place once every 10 years. In the intervening years, it’s only been canceled a few times: once for the Franco-Prussian War, once for each of the World Wars, and last year, because of COVID-19.

“I’m really looking forward to see people coming together again,” said Mayet, “we worked really great together as a village being on stage for half a year before the lockdown and then suddenly, from one day to the next, you don’t see anyone for weeks and months.

“We are optimistic about next year, because we really want to have this situation back,” he said. 

The passion play is now set to run May 14 to October 2 next year. The actors of the village formally began to prepare last month on Ash Wednesday, when director Christian Stückl put out an official “hair and beard decree.”

The decree instructed all the local actors to “let their hair grow out, and the males to also grow a beard.”

Mayet said, “with the hair growing, you start to grow into your role as well.” 

Read the whole hairy story at Christianity Today
In Faith Goes Pop, Religion and Culture, Travel Tags Oberammergau, Germany, Passion Play, Passionspi, Frederik Mayet, Jesus, Beard, Hair and beard decree, Christianity Today, Bavaria and Beyond Tours, Jake Krengel
Comment
A scene from the open-air Oberammergau Passion Play theater in 2010. (PHOTO: Courtesy Oberammergau Passionspiele)

A scene from the open-air Oberammergau Passion Play theater in 2010. (PHOTO: Courtesy Oberammergau Passionspiele)

Plague Started Their Passion Play in 1633. COVID-19 Canceled It in 2020.

March 24, 2020

As an epidemic raged across Europe, a picturesque German village in the mountainous south of Bavaria decided to do something about it. 

Having already lost 80 of their own to the plague, the villagers of Oberammergau pledged to perform the Passion of Jesus Christ—his suffering, death, and resurrection—every tenth year, so that no one else might die. 

So goes the historical legend of the origins of the Oberammergau Passion Play, an almost four-centuries-old tradition that takes place once every 10 years. 

The year of the pledge was 1633, not 2020. The Pest—German for plague—was the so-called “Black Death,” not the COVID-19 pandemic.

But, in an ironic twist of fate, the 42nd Oberammergau season—set to run between May 16 to October 4, 2020—was postponed last week due to measures taken by local government authorities in response to the new coronavirus outbreak. 

For my latest story in Christianity Today, I spoke to organizers, tour operators, locals, and potential pilgrims about their hopes, fears, and the realities of what it means to postpone a once-in-a-decade ritual in light of COVID-19’s rapid spread across the globe.

READ more at Christianity Today


In Religion and Culture, Religion News, Travel Tags Oberammergau, Passionspiele, Passion Play, COVID-19, Coronavirus, Religious ritual, Pilgrimage, Christianity Today, Ken Chitwood
Comment
Latest Writing RSS
Name *
Thank you!

Fresh Tweets

Tweets by kchitwood

Latest Writing RSS

RELIGION | REPORTING | PUBLIC THEOLOGY