Hello everyone!

I am a lithographic (print imagery) historian who specialises in Garfield. Today I wanted to share part of what I and many others in academia consider to be the intellectual height of the cartoon, even if it's popularly considered "a serious diversion" or even "blasphemous".

Created between 1982-1985, The Passion was the pinnacle of Jim Davis' "Psychosis" phase. Mr. Davis was deeply troubled by the material success of Garfield, and considering him tainted decided to redeem him by making one representation of Garfield as Christ for every day since his death in 33 CE. The roughly 711,300 comics were submitted to newspapers sometimes several dozen times per day, variously covered in bodily fluids from the artist. These either replaced those of Christ or were accidentally placed on the paper at random.

While nobody saw or spoke to Jim Davis during this three year period, in which he only responded to inquiries with "I am only the harbinger to the messiah", it is believed that this era of deep religious mania consumed every waking hour. Many depictions lack facial features- especially eyes. This one, #28,581 "Lama Sabachthani", is one of the rare Garfield comics to feature nipples prominently. Later asked about this, Davis stated "I depict Garfield as a man, not as god. He is of god but he is of the flesh. He was sent here to die, you understand."

A bit of fun trivia! In this comic strip you'll notice that Garfield is missing the spear wound to his stomach as Jesus of Nazareth suffered. When drawing the comic Mr. Davis claimed to have a new revelation of the Passion of the Christ in which the true nature of his wounds were shown only to Mr. Davis. This makes the Garfield crucifixion scenes the only known authentic representations and challenges centuries of crucifix design in the Catholic church.

  • UlyssesT
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    edit-2
    27 days ago

    deleted by creator

    • happybadger [he/him]
      hexagon
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      2 years ago

      Mr. Davis doesn't speak about The Passion and frequently becomes aggressive when asked by reporters, but there is a 1985 Rolling Stone interview before his hospitalisation. In that he states, "This is the most real. Nothing has ever been more real. 2000 years of fucking lies from the people you call priests. THIS is what happened. THIS is how he suffered. THIS was revealed to me and only me." From this we can deduce that the cartoonist truly did believe that he was depicting the historical suffering of Christ, kind of like a conduit for God's hand.

      • UlyssesT
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        edit-2
        27 days ago

        deleted by creator

        • happybadger [he/him]
          hexagon
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          2 years ago

          Outside of maybe The Blue Death, his multi-part depiction of a cholera epidemic which features what might be the first depicted death of Garfield by a disease, this is widely regarded as the most serious the comic has been. Sort of like Loss, you strip away the jokes to reveal the truths about Garfield and his character. What redeems him despite his embrace of gluttony, sloth, wrath, and especially lust? In the eyes of Jim Davis, it's that he suffered on the cross for the sins of all mankind. Mr. Davis watched- or hallucinated depending on your perspective- Christ bleed for three years and depicted precisely what he saw.

          • UlyssesT
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            edit-2
            27 days ago

            deleted by creator

            • happybadger [he/him]
              hexagon
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              edit-2
              2 years ago

              I'm simply a historian. I wish I had a tenth of his ability, but my university just gives me special access to the only remaining semi-public archive of The Passion comics outside of the Vatican's. Those are off-limits as they challenge church dogma. We have a lot of the more "obscure" Garfield storylines preserved because they reflect the more troubled and eccentric side of Jim Davis.

              edit: Outside of #250,000-264,000. Famously Mr. Davis had his incident preceding the 1985 hospitalisation in which he burned these in front of his home while nude. We do have some idea of the sufferings of Christ they depicted but only from news footage he pays to suppress. You probably couldn't even find a copy online.

  • AcidSmiley [she/her]
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    2 years ago

    one day when i was lost

    they hung him on a cross

    they hung him on a cross for me

    :garf-troll:

  • FirstToServe [they/them]
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    2 years ago

    After all the eldritch garfield art for the last decade it's nice to see the little shit get his for once

    • happybadger [he/him]
      hexagon
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      2 years ago

      What's especially interesting is how authentically Mr. Davis captured the full Passion of Christ. In #221,940-#221,979, "Tribulation of the Scourge", he draws 39 separate scenes of Roman soldiers lashing Garfield. By the end you can even see his spine. This is as far as I know the first depiction of Garfield's spine in a comic!