Posted on 03/30/2014 7:51:53 AM PDT by Kaslin
The movie Noah has ironically spawned a flood of hullabaloo, eh? Personally, heretofore, I havent seen the flick, but I plan on watching it this Sunday.
Yes, I said it. Im going to check it out even though Ive been warned by the brethren not to because it isnt "biblical". I guess Ill have to wear a disguise so my more persnickety readers wont recognize me. I think Ill go as Carrot Top. Thatll toss them off my scent trail.
Now, when the anti-biblical criticisms began to fly against this pic in its ramp-up for release, I was like, You you you mean a film about a biblical narrative that Hollywood has churned out sports an inaccurate exegesis? Well, slap my mama. Heres my shocked face.
I guess the next thing youre going to tell me is that the X-Men never really happened either. Ruin my life now, why dont you?
Look, folks, I expect nada that Tinseltown turns out to be true to the Verbum Dei. I was surprised they even kept Noahs given name and didnt rechristen him Tanya the Cross-dresser.
All cheekiness aside, I do appreciate the many cultural watchdogs looking out for us. That said, what are we, the church, doing about it? Are we content just to sit back and blather about how much the movie Noah is all wet?
If Christians are going to rail against Hollywood, I suggest getting into the fray and besting em at their own game; or dont bitch when they put out gay cowboy movies or when they morph Moses into some ganja smoking Rastafarian or something.
Is the churchs answer to LAs lunacy the Left Behind movies? Or the ubiquitous and underfunded Jesus flicks that always have him looking like an angst-addled Jared Leto? Nothing like trying to beat something with nothing, Church.
Which leads me to dig the knife further and ask the church the tough question of why havent we championed serious involvement in the arts by our congregants, versus just hissing from the lattices of our stained glass windows? I have actually heard pastors condemn those who wanted to pursue a career in Hollywood and yet, I cant think of a more needy place for serious and excellent Christian involvement than the arts.
At this moment in American history, Im hard pressed to find a focal point more in need of our missionary budget than the entertainment industry because, as the culture goes, so goes the nation; and after seeing pics from Mileys Bangerz concert in Atlanta, I think were doomed.
America is ripe for intelligent and creative Christian artists to effectively infiltrate it. Given the huge influence pop culture has on all of us, the internal rot our nation is undergoing in its character, virtue and faith and the dicey 21st century environment we have thanks to our external and internal enemies, we must try to influence the realm that has the maximum impact on this nation.
The call to impact the entertainment industry is just as legit as the call to go to the mission field or to be a pastor, and any minister who tells you artists any different is straight up goofy.
Look, Church, impacting our nation doesnt just entail passing out gospel tracts, throwing up a pre-fab metal building, buying 16 tambourines, preaching outdated, boring sermons to a self-marginalized people group while picketing and protesting things we hate. There is greatness to Christs great commission that takes the Christian, motivated by love, out of the four walls of our churches to the institutions and industries that influence our nation and the entertainment industry figures in big time to that call.
Historically, Christianity had a huge impact on Western society. Not just in a ministerial sense through the Church or politically through our government, but artistically upon our culture. Believe it or not, the Church communicated a Christian worldview; it mainstreamed character, faith and virtue, and not just through preaching or through legislation but via the artists brush, the writers pen, and the poets verse.
So, my Christian reader: picket, protest and boycott whatever and whomever in Hollywood you think needs an economical smoke signal alerting them to the fact that you think they suck. However, at the same time, get on the offense. Sharpen your skills, you artists. Put down your E-cigarette and your frappachino. Get off your butt, quit playing with and preaching to the converted, and go get dirty in the real world where there is a real impact to be made and true rewards to be had.
And with that, Ill climb down off my soapbox.
Now, here are the three real reasons Im going to watch Noah.
1. I like Russell Crowe. I think hes a damn good, or a blessed, actor.
2. I like massive, epic flicks where nature convulses, lightening strikes and bad people die. Thats why Im such a die-hard Brady Bunch fan.
3. Lastly, and most importantly, as a hunter I have to go see it. Why you ask? Well, its at this stage of the biblical game that God gathered all those critters on the ark, not just to save them for an elaborate menagerie, but for the express purpose for them to be hunted, killed and eaten on this newly washed and baptized terra firma. Yum. Yum.
Then God blessed Noah and his sons, saying to them, 'Be fruitful and increase in number and fill the earth. The fear and dread of you will fall on all the beasts of the earth, and on all the birds in the sky, on every creature that moves along the ground, and on all the fish in the sea; they are given into your hands. Everything that lives and moves about will be food for you. Just as I gave you the green plants, I now give you everything.' Genesis 9:1-3
Oh, BTW. If you wanna see something biblical watch House of Cards. Thatll scare you straight.
And if youd like to see a great pic on dating from a biblical perspective check out, Think Like a Man.
I'm a Christian and that is NOT the reason I won't see the movie. It is a warped version of the Bible story to
a) push the glowbull warming crap and,
b) change the Bible story (the Left will use the movie to say that it is the real story of Noah, even though they don't believe any part of the Book).
Next Up for Hollyweird: The story of Sodom and Gomorrah (names changed, of course) and how it was the homos who saved the people, the destruction being a regular old earthquake and only the homos knew it would happen, but no one would believe them.
God’s Not Dead is not a biblical movie, while Noah is. That’s the difference
All over earth there are marine fossils that have been known to humans since forever. These fossils spawned the universal myths of a flood.
Why must Christians take the movie personally when flood stories permeate almost all cultures?
Yes, the defense of Malta. I want to see the scene where John Valette summons the Muslim prisoners, has them beheaded, loads the cannon with the heads and fires the heads toward the Turks across the harbor. The man meant business.
I was thinking the same thing. I mean, it could be "Lord of the Rings" awesome (though I doubt Peter Jackson would take it on).
I would also love to see what Mel Gibson, outhouse rat-crazy though he may be, could do with the Noah story.
Hollywood would turn it into global warming movie with a touch of Deep Impact on the eve of a gay couple getting married
I’m with Doug on this one. Its a movie for goodness sake. Its just entertainment.
We don’t go to the movies anymore because Mr. GG2 won’t take his gun off and a couple of other politically incorrect reasons but we plan to catch it on PPV as soon as its available.
Thanks. I appreciate that.
I still think that was a smarmy essay. That does not discount anything else he has written or done.
To answer him, there’ve all ready been better Noah’s Ark movies made.
Here are some
Father Noah’s Ark 1933
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o3mkimHFmo0
Noah’s Ark, 1959
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eaGyKuLQTvA
Noah’s Ark, 1928
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Iuiz0tKD900
I had planned to see the movie which is based on the mini series: The Bible, but have not gotten around to it. I did watch the miniseries though
I think some of my fellow Christians think it’s their job to be outraged perpetually. At everything.
I fully agree with your point.
I’ve always felt the same. I’ve thought films depicting Jesus border on blasphemy in a way. No one can play Jesus.
The #hotjesus thing is an example of that problem as well.
Barnum was right.
And will never be out of style, no matter what the atheists claim
Sucker born every minute.
exactly
It is exactly due to the ‘violence’ of Mel’s film that made it so very real, to me.
What Christ endured was violent, the fact that Mel didn’t avoid that reality, was key to the film’s message.
To ‘see’ what Christ endured, for my salvation, was a film worth seeing. It’s humbling to say the least.
Doug Giles used language in that article that was unacceptable. And I am very familiar with what he has done in the past. But that is the past. In other articles, his language has slipped from what is acceptable for a Christian. He seems to think that his past achievements give him license to lecture us on how things should be. With each article, he seems to fall more and more and more in love with himself.
I think hollyweird did a great job with Son of Man, so not sure what this author is talking about.
Doug Giles is the Senior Pastor of Clash Christian Church of Miami, Florida.
When someone points to a turd sandwich and challenges you to "create something better," even a PB&J will suffice.
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