Tuesday, 12/20/05
Illusionist seeks miracles of Jesus Nashvillian Brock Gill travels to Holy Land to examine — and attempt to replicate — biblical phenomena for TV special
By KEN BECK
Staff Writer
Brock Gill can't walk on water, but he believes in the man who did.
The Nashville illusionist is host of the three-part Miracles of Jesus, airing Saturday afternoon on the Discovery Channel, as he goes to the Holy Land and investigates the supernatural powers of Christ.
Gill, a Christian, spent two weeks in Israel attempting to either create the illusion of or decipher several individual miracles as described in the first four books of the New Testament.
"I tried to figure out a way to replicate those in some way. Some I couldn't even get close, some I could come up with a convincing version. We turned water into wine. That one was very easy for me to do. The calming of the storm I was able to do, but we show how we pulled that one off with special effects," said Gill, 30, a Louisiana native who made Nashville his home base three years ago.
The other miracles Gill explores are walking on water, raising the dead, the multiplication of food, demon exorcism, healing the blind man and the resurrection.
The idea behind Miracles of Jesus originated with producer Jean Claude Bragard, who pitched it to BBC Discovery. They wanted an illusionist to base the show around and contacted Gill.
"I didn't know what to think, whether they were legitimate or small time," said the illusionist. "My reaction was kind of mixed: This could be a cool idea or what is this show gonna really be about? I wanted to find real truth and not expose Jesus as a fraud. They were pretty honest and upfront, so I decided to commit to it."
Eight years ago, Gill was a sawmill worker in Arkansas. A couple of close brushes with chainsaws sent him to praying about where to go with his life. He quit his job, got some books and taught himself how to perform illusions. Now entertaining in 150 shows a year, at such venues as theaters, civic centers and churches, he has made a ministry of it.
"I am known for the water coffin, where I have people from the audience chain and lock me up and put me inside a coffin full of water and I try to escape out of it. Another thing I created is the blind ride. I take someone from the audience and they blindfold me and duct tape me up around my neck and then bring out a dirt bike motorcycle and I hop on the bike and ride it."
As a magician, Gill can appear to make people float in air and he can make himself disappear in a box. He performs his illusions to draw crowds.
Thus, he asked himself, "Was Jesus a magician? Was he an illusionist? Was he a hypnotist? Was he a paranormalist? Or was he just a master of psychology? What was the deal? Was he a real miracle worker?"
So he went to work, aided by his computer, his craft, his crew and the Bible, while a number of biblical historians and theologians also gave insight from their own studies.
Gill's quest took him to such sites in the Holy Land as Cana, Nain, the Golan Heights, the Sea of Galilee, the Jordan River and to Jerusalem, home of Golgotha and the Holy Sepulchre.
After it was all over, how did the adventure strengthen or weaken his faith?
"To begin with, I had to take my faith and my beliefs and set them aside, so I could take an objective approach. I wanted to know why I believed the things I had been told. Through the whole process, it strengthened me," Gill said. "I feel I am more of a believer now than I ever was. There are some skeptics' views that really make a lot of sense. I really had to wrestle with them. Scripture comes to life now in a way it never had."
The third hour of the program is centered on the resurrection of Christ.
"There was nothing I could do to try to reproduce it, so I did some symbolic illusions. . . . We had to go into skeptics' views, such as maybe Jesus never did actually die on the cross and maybe Jesus was never put into the tomb," Gill said.
As for viewers of Miracles, he says, "I think that those who are atheists are going to think again, I think those who are seekers are gonna be more open to the idea of Jesus, and I think those who are believers are gonna be more convinced and educated about the God that they follow." •