Jennifer Garner on why she started going to church while filming new movie

These are photos of Jennifer Garner at the Miracles From Heaven premiere in Dallas, Texas. The film is out on March 18th. She’s shown with the woman she portrays in the film, a Texas woman named Christy Beam, whose daughter was cured of a digestive disorder after falling from a tree. The family, which are devout Christians, claims it was divine intervention since the little girl had a near death experience. (I’ve heard that can be attributed to neurotransmitters and a lack of oxygen to the brain, but your beliefs may vary and that’s fine.) She also shown with DeVon Franklin, a VP of Sony Pictures (the hot guy) and Bishop T.D. Jakes, who was a producer on the film. Those two are also responsible for the film version of Heaven is For Real.

Garner just happened to start going to church a few months ago, which coincided with when she was filming this movie. She regularly gets papped with her family on Sundays going to the farmer’s market so we have a definite timeline for her church-going, and she has a ready explanation for that. She says she did it because the film inspired her:

Garner, who was born in Texas, was asked by host Jane McGarry why she wanted to do this particular movie: “Did you want to talk about faith and God?”

“I love the message in the film, and I love the message of hope,” she says. “I love how inspiring the film is. But I also really connected with Christy just from reading the book and from reading the script, and I wanted to honor what she and Annabel and the whole family went through.”

Asked if she and her children go to church, Garner said they do.

“Is that weird in Hollywood?” McGarry asked.

“You know, it did seem strange,” she replied. “I grew up going to church every Sunday of my life, and when I did move to L.A., it wasn’t something that was just part of the culture in the same way, at least in my life. But it didn’t mean that I lost who I was. But there was something about doing this film and talking to my kids about it and realizing that they were looking for the structure of church every Sunday. So it was a great gift of this film that it took us back to finding our local Methodist church and going every Sunday. It’s really sweet…

“Nobody who meets this child [the subject of the film], with her sincerity and her frank honesty and faith, would ever think for a second that this child is making anything up or is being sensational,” she says. “She is just true to the bone. That’s just who she is.

“She is an old soul,” Garner adds. “There’s something very special about her. She can be very internal and quiet, but in the next second she’s just a little girl running around and eating fettuccine Alfredo. I learned so much about this disease that when I sat down with her and she had a plate of pasta in front of her, there was a part of me that felt like, ‘You can’t eat that!’ But she’s okay; she really is. It’s a miracle.”

Although she says she doesn’t ever “put my children in peril in my mind” while acting, Garner does think that being a parent herself helps her immerse in these types of roles.

“I do think that being a mother of three has opened my heart in a way, and that helps me access that ferocity that all mothers feel for their children,” she says. “It’s not unique to me.”

Asked if she uses her faith to overcome personal challenges, Garner says, “Of course. I think that’s what it’s all about. But there’s a beautiful line in the movie that really resonates with me; Christy is having a conversation with her pastor and she says, ‘I just don’t understand. I don’t know where my faith is right now.’ She’s in the crisis of faith. And he says to her, ‘You know, everyone is going to struggle and I look at it this way: I’ve struggled with faith and I’ve struggled without it. And I’ll tell you, it’s a whole lot easier with.'”

Over the weekend, Garner and Beam attended a service at The Potter’s House Church, led by Bishop T.D. Jakes, a producer on the movie.

“I loved it,” Garner said of the experience. “I’m so jealous of the people of Dallas that they can draw from T.D. Jakes and can go every week to hear him preach.”

One message of the movie is that everything – even the little things in life – are miracles. Garner says she can relate.

[From People]

I’m of two minds on this. It could be sincere that she was inspired to go back to church by working on this film or she could have wanted to appear more churchy to this film’s target audience. Or, to borrow a phrase from Kaiser, it’s probably a little of column a) and a little of column b). This movie will probably make bank and it ties into her image as a devoted mom, which seems genuine to an extent although she certainly plays it up. It looks like complete tripe though, like total glurge. She’s not the most talented actress, I thought she was miscast on Dallas Buyer’s Club, and this is probably a smart career move for her.

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53 Responses to “Jennifer Garner on why she started going to church while filming new movie”

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  1. oliphant says:

    I’ve always thought she was one of those actresses who need the right part to shine- I absolutely loved her in Alias, thought she was amazing and that role seemed written for her- everything else she’s been in-apart from 13 going on 30- she was a bit ‘meh’ in. A bit like Uma Thurman- she seems terrible in everything apart from her stuff with quentin tarantino.

    • Jayna says:

      She was really good in Juno. I thought she was miscast in Dallas Buyer’s Club. She added nothing to the part.

      • Rhiley says:

        I haven’t seen many JG movies, but I agree that she was very good Juno.

      • oliphant says:

        my god I can’t remember her being in that? must check it out again 🙂

      • tracking says:

        Yes, Juno was her best work imo. She tends to be a little affected and overly girlish in her roles, which bugs me. I’d love to see her in another role with the physicality of Alias too.

      • mia girl says:

        My favorite might be Catch and Release, although that has much more to do with Timothy Olyphant. Yum.

        I really like her in 13 going on 30, and aside from Juno and Alias, I’ll add Catch Me If You Can to the list. It was a small but memorable performance.

    • Mimz says:

      Loved, Loved, LOVED her in Alias. She was really amazing there. I have a soft spot for her, she seems so nice. But I can’t with the excessive PR-mindedness. It just bores me.

      • oliphant says:

        yeah I’ve always loved her since Alias- wish she’d get a really good TV series or something-ooh and I’d love a new Alias one off special or something but think JJ is probably too busy now for that waaaaah….

  2. Jayna says:

    I’d say both columns also.

    Here’s the kicker. Not that she started going to church after the movie wrapped and she was back in LA. With the divorce, I could see returning to her roots in that time of need and the movie sparking that. It’s the fact that she alerted the paps for her strolls into the church. And we all know she did. That is so PR driven thinking ahead to the interviews she would be giving for this movie and the faith-based audience.

  3. milietan says:

    Curing of digestive orders is caused by “neurotransmitters and lack of oxygen to the brain”?

  4. na na says:

    Faith is a powerful thing… It could make or destroy your life honestly but it’s enough to give you purpose. maybe that’s what she wants. happy for her

    • Esmom says:

      That’s not what I got from her comments. She sounds like she’s wanting a place for her kids to go to regularly on Sundays rather than embarking on a spiritual quest.

      • J-Who says:

        LOL, I didn’t get that AT ALL. When you’ve been raised with God in your life somehow, whether it be just a little bit or full throttle, you have a need after you have your own children to find out how to get a little closer to the Lord that has blessed you so much. You want your kids to have a better knowledge of and relationship with God so that maybe their lives will be a little happier, a little more grounded and a little more loving knowing that they always have Christ to fall back on. Jennifer Garner said she remembers having that as a kid and wants her children to have that same relationship. Nothing wrong with that.

    • Ravensdaughter says:

      Jennifer is going through a tough time, too, and I agree that struggling with life issues when you have some sort of faith is easier than struggling without it. She is going back to her roots, vs reinventing the wheel as I did.
      I converted to Buddhism, then went through a nasty divorce with kids. The Buddhism gave me strength, but not company. I now attend a Unitarian Church for the fellowship. That makes me a U-Bu!
      As for Jennifer, I think it’s a bit of a) and b). She worked it out with her kids, so the experience is beneficial to them as well.
      I also wonder if people who actually bother to go to church in LA are more grounded-close to normal! I would hope so!

      • Amelie says:

        Ravensdaughter:

        ” I agree that struggling with life issues when you have some sort of faith is easier than struggling without it.” I agree and, aren’t we all asking the same questions? Haven’t the same questions been asked for millennia? A religion’s beliefs and practices answers these questions.

        Also,for me, personally, practicing the same religion as my ancestors(Catholicism), makes me feel a connection/oneness with them. Frankly, I think the spirituality of native Americans captures this idea the best as they revere animals, the environment and their ancestors; it’s all interwoven in their culture.

  5. Jess says:

    Ugh. Everything she does seems so calculated.

    • isabelle says:

      Calculating is seen as a bad thing and want to know why? Its attached to women usually, women that have a plan to get what they want. If a man was intentional in his steps to a goal he would be called successful, influential, purposeful, powerful. Women are called calculating, manipulative, cunning, etc…. when they have a plan to get what they want. Seriously think about it. Why is calculating bad?

      • Mia4s says:

        Calculating is bad when we are supposed to buy it as authenticity. There is a difference between setting and reaching goals, see Reese Witherspoon producing stronger projects for herself or McConnaughy turning down big money roles to rehabilitate his career; and calculated publicity (Christian movie? Quick! Look more Christian).

        And mostly applied to women? Well no actually. See the reaction to:

        – Leo’s Oscar campaign.
        – Beiber’s apology tour.
        – Johnny Depp’s “Native American-ness” for the Lone Ranger;
        – Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes.

        Is she genuine here? Maybe. Maybe not. Part of the fun here is dissecting these stories.

  6. Sam says:

    When does this woman plan to disappear? Everything she does is calculating and she’s always in your face about it. It seems it’s her only way to stay relevant but what she doesn’t realize is that the ship has sailed and no one really cares.

  7. Esmom says:

    Agree that this movie looks atrocious. Call me skeptical but anything connected with the fraudulent Heaven Is For Real needs to be taken with a huge grain of salt.

    Also, I don’t know about Garner’s reasoning for taking her kids to church. They needed the structure of church on Sundays? That sounds like they just needed to fill their schedule and doesn’t seem to have anything to do with answering questions about spirituality or faith, which is what I thought what church was supposed to be about. And which is why I realized I couldn’t subject my kids to something I had grown completely cold about.

    • aims says:

      I couldn’t agree more. I grew up in the “church.” Sunday morning and evening plus Wens. I also was subjected to summer bible camp. I became disillusioned during my teen years and I made the decision that my children wouldn’t be apart of that. For me, I was disgusted with the hypocrisy then I got mad when I was told how to look at the world and even told how to vote. I guess God’s a republican, who knew? Also I was very disturbed by how everyone had to be made into the same cookie cutter mold. It’s like you’re supposed to shut off your brain and go into auto pilot.

      So, organized religion is not something we practice in our home. My kids know they are loved just as they are. They know we except them for being their authentic self. My children have seen all walks of life and we have taught them the basics of being a good human being. Compassion, kindness and an open heart, and we have witnessed them using those tools. What else can a parent ask for?

      • Jayna says:

        I have fond memories of Sunday School and Summer Bible School, which was a lot of fun crafts. And I was raised Baptist. LOL Don’t judge. I quit church by my teens, though, as all my siblings did, and our parents didn’t force us to go to church once we were older. I can’t imagine going to a Baptist church as an adult, but as a kid it was just nice Sunday School books being taught about Jesus to little kids, nothing overbearing, which I’m sure went on in the church services, which in there we didn’t pay attention to, were given coloring books by my mom to keep us quiet while they listened.

        The Presbyterian Church (there’s two factions) I attended as an adult was very intellectual and inclusive. The sermons were never negative nor judgmental in tone, never inflammatory. The Presbyterian Church I was a member of is now performing gay marriages in our city if you are a member and make sure to have clergy who aren’t against that.

        But I don’t attend church anymore for many reasons. Still, I think many denominations are changing with the times. The growing pains were rough when doing that and lost many members, but are necessary if churches want to continue on.

      • Jayna says:

        @Aims, I forgot to add regarding your remark about being told what to think, and it is a very narrow view of the world for conservative Christians raised that way, this was an interesting article by a former far right wing evangelical and how she learned to think for herself, and how once she began questioning what she was taught, it made her realize that to believe in Jesus and his teachings meant she should be a liberal, going against everything she was taught in her home and church.

        http://www.huffingtonpost.com/susie-meister/studying-religion-republican-made-me-a-liberal_b_9293716.html

      • aims says:

        Thanks for the link! Just to clarify myself, I was raised in the Jimmy Swagger and when Sunday mornings were saturated with televangelist. That was my childhood. I don’t believe all Christians aren’t as fundamental as how I was raised.

        At the end of the day, there are some things that I carry with me today. There’s also some things I roll my eyes at. I do believe that, and maybe it’s how I was raised when I was in the church, that overall it was oppressive. There was conditional love and it made high school look like a breeze as far as cliques go. I also took issue with the offering (giving of money ). My grandma was on a very fixed income and she felt very compelled to give at least 10% of her income. She barely made it through the month, meanwhile the pastor is driving a brand new car. Just another example.

      • Esmom says:

        Thanks, everyone, for sharing. My upbringing was Catholic school, Catholic church. Talk about indoctrination! I really enjoyed it, though, in many ways, when I was little. I think the rituals and some messages, like life after death, were comforting.

        But then as I got older the emphasis on sin and confession really fueled my anxiety. I was convinced I was going to hell for even the smallest infractions. By my teens I realized there was no room for questioning or thinking for yourself and I pretty much walked away.

        Still, I attempted to get my kids involved in religious education, first in the Catholic church, which didn’t last long because I realized I just couldn’t support them. So we switched to a liberal Christian denomination and it was better than the Catholic church but still really tricky. I and my kids liked the emphasis on social justice, charitable giving/acts and openness to other religions. But still this devotion to Jesus tripped me and my kids up, lol, and again I felt hypocritical being involved in something that didn’t feel genuine. I have observed that many people force their kids to go to church not because they believe but because they had to. It’s like an old habit they can’t or are afraid to break.

        Sometimes I feel like I’ve failed my kids in not teaching them more about religion. I do think they have learned what’s most important, though — to be good and kind human beings. Most days it feels like enough but other days when people are broadcasting all their church activities and devotion, I feel less than adequate.

      • aims says:

        Don’t feel bad. We’ve both made a decision to raise our children with the freedom to figure themselves out without guilt. You can be a good person without religion.

      • na na says:

        @aims I really appreciate what you said because it kinda mirrors my own views. I am still a Christian by my own choice but there are times when i get absolutely disgusted with the way the people are controlled without them even being aware. It made me sad that some of them are not aware of the total hypocrisy… the brain washing and the discrimination of the church leaders. most fanatics are Christians just to make other people feel bad about themselves.. they are judgmental and stuck in their ways. I am a liberal. I use the teachings of the bible to work on myself and my relationship with GOD and my family. If i see anything I do not approve i speak out. unfortunately i live in a community where doubting anything you see in the bible is synonymous with “demon spawn” but we live and learn. The one thing I try to do is practice the message I feel the Bible is trying to instill the most… Love

  8. Aussie girl says:

    I think Leo started going to church to while filming the The Revenant. Well maybe not him, he probably sent Lucas Hass instead. Ha! Sorry I can’t help it.

  9. Lucy2 says:

    I vote column A/column B also. I can believe she was inspired to start attending church again, and if it’s working for her and her kids, great. But she’s making it public to sell the movie.

  10. JoJo says:

    I agree, she’s not a very talented actress. I never watched Alias. I did love her in 13 Going On 30, but other than that, she’s just Jenifer Garner in a movie every time. Dallas Buyers Club – she stood out like a sore thumb among those actors. I watched the trailer, and Miracles from Heaven looks bad – like it should have been a TV movie for Lifetime, although I’m sure it will make $ from the churchgoing masses.

    • ScotiaGirl says:

      Did you watch the youtube short Selena she was in? I thought she was amazing in that. But agree that since the Kingdom she has done nothing worth mentioning.

      • Jayna says:

        Oh, I forgot about Kingdom. I agree, she was good in that.

        She’s been in quite a few movies since marrying Ben, but most all were small supporting roles, and I haven’t seen most of them. She was good in that Al Pacino movie, Danny Collins, the indie, but it was a small role and played a wife. Still, she was good in it for what it was.

        She looked miscast in that movie Draft Day from the trailer I saw.

        She has worked, but I haven’t seen most of these movies. So I can’t comment about her acting in them except Danny Collins, Juno, The Kingdom, and Dallas Buyer’s Club, with the only one she was bad in that I actually saw was Dallas Buyer’s Club. I did see Valentine’s Day but can’t remember anything about that movie or that she was even in it. I just remember Jessica Biels was in it.

        Nine Lives
        2016 Miracles from Heaven
        2015 Danny Collins
        2014 Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day
        2014 Men, Women and Children
        2014 Draft Day
        2013 Dallas Buyers Club
        2012 Butter
        2012 The Odd Life of Timothy Green
        2011 Arthur
        2010 Valentine’s Day
        2009 The Invention of Lying
        2009 Ghosts of Girlfriends Past
        2007 Juno
        2007 The Kingdom
        2007 Catch and Release
        2005 Elektra

      • Ana says:

        I like her in Selena. I thought it was a very powerful short film. It was how she fell in love with the priest. Just her facial expressions alone made that short clip worth watching along with the priest, played by Molina.

        Love her on Juno, 13, Alias, Danny and DBC. She was miscast on Draft Day but my husband enjoyed that movie because it was about football. Good movie actually.

        Now if she could stop playing a mom in any movie, then, maybe it is worth watching. She should get a new agent along with a better stylist. She needs a change. Year after year, she looks the same.

  11. lila fowler says:

    She’s so fake. Her face always does that Tom Cruise thing, where she might be smiling but her eyes look anxious and pained.

  12. Bettyrose says:

    Wasn’t she also in The Invention of Lying which has a strong atheist theme? These could be companion movies!

  13. QQ says:

    I’m going with sweetening herself to the target audience, and really if you look at her sell lately as in a few years til now she’s been in that “regular sweet fun mom like you ” tip for a while, so it only makes sense that she is going to in short order start making preachy movies with Kirk Cameron LOL

  14. Amelie says:

    What a statement on how the culture has changed…formally practicing religion is now considered something that needs to be explained; it’s considered counter cultural and oftentimes extreme in many venues. On the other hand, it’s OK to claim one is spiritual, practice yoga and other eastern disciplines which have roots in religious practice. And, it’s all too often that the media “frames” religious practice and it’s (potential negative) effect on culture. It’ s very sad.

    • Er, no. At least not in this case. I think it is supremely GROSS for her to start going to church just to promote herself as the wholesome, hands on mom, simply because she’s doing a movie with religious themes. I don’t care what she does/doesn’t believe in, but she’s using religion to make herself look good.

      • Amelie says:

        Virginia Coriolanus-I am going to disagree with you…who knows what is really going on with Jen? All of the posts here are guesses…down thread, Diane posted a Youtube video where Jen talks about her faith. BTW, I agree with what she says about Hollywood. When Jen says feels very authentic to me.

    • bettyrose says:

      Amelie –
      Practicing yoga is a personal lifestyle choice, just like attending church. Both actions are for one’s own purposes and neither one negatively impacts anyone else who chooses not to practice yoga or attend church. However, using your religion to influence elections or legislation that dictates what others can do with their lives, that is not “spiritual.” That is tyranny. So there is absolutely no parallel between practicing yoga/attending church and promoting the cult of religious “values.” I have nothing but respect for people who quietly practice their own religion or spiritual rituals – and nothing but irritation with those who try to impose their own religion onto the rest of us.

      • Amelie says:

        bettyrose:
        Firstly, yoga is rooted in multiple religions: Hinduism, Buddism etc. The poses are tied to meditation, spiritual goals; there is a definite ‘theology’ behind them. All theology results in values. Values change the way we perceive things and interact with them.

        The nature of any belief system-including organized religion- is that it permeates one’s life. It is not a coat that one take’s off and puts on when it is convenient. Many groups attempt to influence elections and government officials-including lobbyists for oil, the environment etc.-you have only singled out “your” (I guess meaning my, Catholic)faith. My experience has been that most folks who critique the Catholic faith, don’t understand it. They ignore the great good that the Church has brought to healthcare, education, science, the arts. Was that tyranny? The Catholic faith is not “religion lite.” It is full of subtleties…and miracles. It takes a bit of work to understand it at an adult level.

  15. frivolity says:

    Oh, Lord …

    I think Garner is consummately calculating. I also think this film/story is extremely irresponsible. JMHO.

  16. Tiffany says:

    Queen Latifah is in this crap. *sigh*

  17. hoyachick says:

    That’s Megan Goode’s husband (the hot guy), they wrote a book about abstaining from sex prior to their marriage and I saw them on CBS This Morning with Charlie Rose a few weeks ago. He’s a producer and a pastor if I’m not mistaken. No comment on JG.

  18. JoJo says:

    Now OK! mag is posting that they had a romantic dinner where Ben gave a “tearful apology” and now they’re reconciling. I just can’t with these two.

    • Jayna says:

      I’m sure 70 percent of the tabloids are getting zero from them. They are just filling pages, like they do with Angie/Brad new adoption, breaking up, Jen came between them on and on, and the Jen is pregnant every other week, Justin left her, back together.

      You do know that most of the tabloid stuff is made up?.

      • JoJo says:

        Haha! 😉 Yes, I know most of it is made up. Although there have been occasions when Radar/OK! have been right. But I guess they all get some of them right sometimes, if just by chance. Pretty crazy though – the Hollywood Life pickup of the OK! story has tons of details down to what Jen was wearing that night on their “romantic” date and how Ben acted, pulled out her chair, etc. Can they really just flat out lie like that? Ha! I realize that makes me sound really naive. :/

    • Diane says:

      Haha, I went to check it out. My favorite line was “in addition to an extravagant dinner of indulgent off-menu delicacies,…, Ben broke down in a pre-planned “tearful apology” to Jen.

      Pre-planned? Really?

      • Ana says:

        The divorce will be announced after Batman’s film release. It is all a calculated move for all parties involved especially for BA and WB.

  19. Diane says:

    Here’s a link to a video someone took within the theater at the Q&A after the premier/preview this past Sunday in Dallas. She goes in depth (way more than the GMTexas interview) about the kids going to church and the changes from the movie in that aspect of their lives. It’s very interesting and sincere, IMO.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LLfNe2hZcfs

  20. Deevia says:

    Hmm it’s a U.S public figure’s age old trick to say they go to Church / believe in God to portray themselves in good light and gain public sympathy/relevance. It fits her “average mom” image too and works in her divorce. Why else mention it? She has such memorable performance to me and pull of interesting characters – Alias, Elektra, 13GO30 etc But she’s so blah out of costumes Zzzzzzzzz