12.30.2011
The Next Three Days (2010) - M4.3/E6
I was told this would be a movie with an interesting moral dilemma, and though we are shown that the main character contemplates this dilemma, the dilemma shouldn't have existed in the first place. This was a pretty intense thriller, more suspenseful than action packed, and worth a watch on Netflix if you subscribe to their streaming service.
A happily married couple's family is torn apart when random, coincidental events make it appear that the wife brutally murdered her boss. The husband, knowing she is innocent, resolves to do whatever it takes to get her out of prison. He first exhausts all legal means and realizes that there is nothing that can be done to free her. He then resorts to breaking her out of prison and undertakes some serious preparations to do so. This is where the supposed dilemma exists.
John Brennan (faithful husband) forces himself to be willing to do whatever it takes to get his wife out of prison, and ends up falsifying medical records and killing people and committing arson (though those involved were drug dealers). Initially he is extremely hesitant to commit these illegal acts, but forces himself into the mindset to follow through with his plan. During the process, his relationship with his son and wife (even though in prison) is stretched pretty thin and he almost loses his wife during the break out.
Is it really a measure of a husband's love for his wife to go to any end in order to rectify something wrongly attributed to her? If my wife were innocently put in jail, I, too, would exhaust my legal resources; and if the law could do nothing to help her, what happened next would be in God's hands. Being a firm believer in Divine intervention, I believe God would be able to help both me (my family) and my wife through such a trial of faith, and if He felt it necessary, could even change the hearts and minds of those falsely accusing her so that she would eventually be let out (though this would not be very likely). Our relationship could continue to grow, and one day we would be reunited.
This may sound trite given that I've never been (nor will likely ever be) put in this situation; but I honestly believe that adherence to God's law and faith in God and His Son Jesus Christ is the most anyone can do to receive the maximum assistance in the most dire of situations in which we may find ourselves.
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