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To: cincinnati65

Yep. My wife and I debated on whether this was something to let the kids watch.

There are some things about it that are just plain asinine. Like in “Let it Go”...that bit about “no wrong or right”.

But other things are more ambiguous. Elsa complains about being tired of being “a good girl”. Could that be read in a Sodomite context? Sure. It could also be read in a morally wholesome context...like I want to be more religious, devote myself to God, join a convent something like that, and everyone wants me to be “a good girl” and adhere to society’s norms, etc.

In the end we let them watch it. There are some good themes there of redemption and love being defined not as a feeling but as self-sacrifice for the good of another (wow...”no greater love hath man than this”, right?). And as the father of girls I definitely appreciate the message about not being deceived in marriage proposals by slick talking/looking guys. I don’t think the problems in the film are so grave that they will be hard to correct with good upbringing. But we will see.

The Sodomists make everything about them. EVERYTHING. We see life as through a veil, they see it as in a mirror.


68 posted on 04/23/2014 1:59:23 PM PDT by Claud
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To: Claud
The part I liked about Frozen was the twist on "An Act of True Love". For once it was not about what you do not what is done to you.

I found it amusing how "no right, no wrong, no rules" exploded once someone else turned up in her perfect kingdom of snow. Which is pretty much what rules are about, they are about getting along with others.

71 posted on 04/23/2014 3:54:22 PM PDT by Harmless Teddy Bear (Proud Infidel, Gun Nut, Religious Fanatic and Freedom Fiend)
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