0:00
/
0:00
Transcript

“He Is Beautiful”: What a Brad Pitt Fly Fishing Scene Taught Me About God, Grace, and Fatherhood

Why I’m using movie clips to teach Biblical truth.

Share

Let’s be honest—Substack isn’t the first place you expect a preacher to post a Brad Pitt scene.

But the more I pray about where we are culturally, the more I realize something:

Our people are starving for real food.

Not just lectures. Not just doctrine.

They need story.

Because stories sneak past the defenses.

They teach what lectures can’t.

And if you’ve been following me for any length of time, you know I believe God is the Author of every great story—whether Hollywood realizes it or not.

That’s why I’m starting something new.

Every week, I’ll share a clip from a film—some familiar, some forgotten—and use it to teach Biblical, soul-level truth that’ll stick in your bones like good stew on a cold night.

And we’re starting with A River Runs Through It.

Subscribe

“It’s a fine fisherman.”

In the scene I’m about to share (watch it above), Paul—played by Brad Pitt—is fly fishing in Montana with his brother and father. They’ve fished together since childhood. But something happens here that goes far beyond trout.

Paul’s not just fishing—he’s dancing.

The rhythm. The grace. The technique. He’s no longer mimicking others. He’s created his own style.

And when he hooks the big one, the entire family watches in awe.

His brother cheers. His father, the Presbyterian preacher who raised him with the Word of God and strict discipline, stares as Paul holds the fish high.

And then—the most unlikely line in the movie happens.

The father quietly says:

“He is beautiful.”

That’s it. That’s the whole point.

Not the size of the fish.

Not the trick to the cast.

Not even the poetic scenery.

It’s the father’s affirmation of the son.

“He is beautiful.”

It’s what every boy longs to hear from his dad—even if he never admits it.

It’s what every man secretly aches to believe:

That who he is, and what he does, is seen… and delights the father.

Now let me take this higher.

This is the Gospel.

God isn’t waiting for your perfection.

He’s watching your cast.

He sees your persistence, your struggle, your grit in the river.

And when you yield your life to Christ, He doesn’t just tolerate you.

He doesn’t just “bless you” because you dotted your spiritual i’s and crossed your moral t’s.

He delights in you.

“The Lord thy God in the midst of thee is mighty; he will save,

he will rejoice over thee with joy;

he will rest in his love,

he will joy over thee with singing.”

—Zephaniah 3:17

Do you hear that?

God sings over His sons. He rejoices. He doesn’t just redeem you—He enjoys you.

Share

Why I’m Doing This Series

Every man I’ve ever discipled has this in common:

They remember moments. Stories. Lines from movies that stuck.

Sometimes more than Sunday sermons.

That’s not because they’re shallow.

It’s because we were made for story.

Jesus used them constantly—parables, analogies, pictures, metaphors.

So I’m picking up the ancient tradition of letting stories point back to Christ, grace, fatherhood, redemption, manhood, and identity.

What to Expect

  • Short clips with spiritual commentary

  • No fluff, no woke, no Hollywood idolatry

  • Just biblical truth drawn from moments of grace hiding in plain sight

Each post will pair a powerful scene with a biblical teaching and a real-world application for men, fathers, leaders, and families. It’ll be raw, unpolished, and 100% real.

If you’re reading this and haven’t upgraded yet:

Now’s the time.

Subscribe

Because this world is full of cheap, hollow media.

And I’m committed to bringing you the good stuff

The stories that don’t just entertain but ignite your soul.

Support this mission by becoming a paid subscriber.

Or fuel it with a one-time Buy Me a Coffee.

This isn’t just content.

It’s discipleship through story.

And it starts now.

Share

Subscribe

Let me know in the comments what movie scene you want me to cover next. I’ve got a list… but you may surprise me.

Until next time—keep casting.

The Father’s still watching the river.

Discussion about this video