Posted on 12/09/2001 4:42:14 AM PST by foreverfree
The Simpsons: sacrilege or satire?
New book by Florida religion writer tries to answer the question.
By Richard N. Ostling
AP Religion Writer
How God appeared in a dream: Perfect teeth. Nice smell. A class act all the way.
The family religion: You know, the one with all the well-meaning rules that don't work in real life. Uh, Christianity.
Church signboard slogan: God Welcomes His Victims.
This is just a very small sample of one-liners about religion from The Simpsons.
For 12-plus seasons, the animated series has mined religious subjects for laughs like no other show on television.
The staple of the Fox network has sometimes been called sacrilegious rather than satirical for its jabs at clergy and the faithful alike. But religious commentators have looked at the animated series and found plenty to like.
In a rare coincidence, two leading Protestant magazines, the liberal Christian Century and conservative Christianity Today, simultaneously ran friendly cover stories on the show in early 2000.
Christian Century said it's appreciated in religious circles, while Christianity Today hailed the good-guy characterization of the Simpsons' evangelical neighbor, Ned Flanders.
An anthology, The Simpsons and Philosophy: The D'oh! of Homer (Open Court), reported religion was an element in 70 percent of randomly selected episodes and the major theme in 10 percent.
The latest analysis, in a book many folks will find under their Christmas tree, claims that strange as it might seem the cartoon more accurately reflects the faith lives of Americans than any other show in the medium.
In The Gospel According to The Simpsons (Westminster John Knox), Mark I. Pinsky notes that the characters regularly pray, attend worship and discuss humanity's inescapable religious questions. God's existence is unquestioned and he sometimes intervenes directly in the preposterous plots.
Pinsky, religion writer for the Orlando Sentinel, also notes that, despite ridiculing everything in sight, the show is basically pro-family and usually lets a rough morality triumph.
The Simpsons may be irreverent toward churches and clergy, he says, but other institutions suffer more, particularly big business. (Montgomery Burns, owner of the nuclear power plant, once hatched a scheme to block out the sun, forcing everyone to buy more electricity).
Pinsky, an active Reform Jew, is not a big TV fan. But he was goaded into sampling The Simpsons by his children and got hooked. He can only hope now that the book replicates his publisher's 1965 title The Gospel According to Peanuts by divinity student Robert Short, which sold 10 million copies.
In that more innocent era, a lot of people were offended by putting something as holy as the Gospel together with a comic strip, says Short, now a Presbyterian minister in Monticello, Ark. The New York Times considered it a perilous experiment.
Now preachers make frequent use of pop culture. But less often does pop culture, especially TV, treat religion.
With The Simpsons, Pinsky says, early episodes featured bratty son Bart. But as the focus shifted more toward bumbling father Homer, the show began tackling deeper issues, Pinsky says. Besides, a series this long always needs new material, and religion is rich territory.
The Simpsons crew was sharp enough to realize this even though, according to Pinsky's estimate, 80 percent of the show's writers over the past dozen years have been either skeptics or atheists. Several, however, have called been active Christians.
The characters they and creator Matt Groening have created for fictional Springfield are a microcosm of American religious and particularly Protestant types.
Homer is the sort who regularly displays his religious ignorance (he calls God omnivorous instead of omnipresent), snoozes in church and prays largely in desperation. God, if you really are God, you'll get me tickets to that game. Why do you mock me, O Lord? he moans in one show.
Long-suffering wife Marge is the solid saint who delivers the rare serious lines: There has to be more to life than just what we see, Lisa. Everyone needs something to believe in.
Precocious daughter Lisa is the mainline Protestant rationalist and preacher of social justice.
Son Bart veers between belief when needed and being the incarnation of the devil.
Next-door neighbor Flanders has his boys play Bible Bombardment board games and vacations at America's Most Judgmental Religious Theme Park. His piety irritates people, but he always returns scorn with love, and is committed to his faith.
Then there's Rev. Lovejoy, burned-out pastor of Springfield's community church, who veers from non-denominational blandness to fundamentalist rigidity. God is among those who find his unctuous sermons boring.
Non-Protestants don't come off perfectly, either. Krusty the Clown, the show's Jewish character, is a gruff, chain-smoking show-biz veteran. The depiction of workaholic Kwik-E-Mart manager Apu, a Hindu, has offended some Indian-Americans, partly because he's at once obsequious and overcharging.
Catholics are less visible, but the Catholic League objected to a satirical commercial in which a scantily clad woman wearing a cross suggestively filled a car with gas as a voice-over said The Catholic Church: We've made a few . . . changes.
Among all denominations, liberal Unitarianism with its lack of doctrine may fare the worst. If that's the one true faith, I'll eat my hat, Homer exclaims.
For all its barbs, however, The Simpsons rarely mentions Jesus and steers clear of explicit Christian teachings, Pinsky says. He says that, in the end, the show may actually cloak a sacred essence in the guise of profane storytelling.
He concludes that whether the series, once considered so anti-authoritarian, is subversive or supportive of faith is largely in the eye of the beholder.
The newspaper article which Pinsky expanded into his book ran in this section in October 1999.
It's not as though Buddhism was depicted as the one true faith or anything. I mean, it was Richard Friggin' Gerbil-boy Gere for god's sake... I think the satire was on Lisa this time, for deserting Christianity for something she thought was more enlightened...
"Worst episode ever."
Buddhists and Methodists made the list yesterday... funny episode.
Now that is comedy!
The story ends with Bart, Lisa, and Maggie's having to choose which family, or path, they wish to follow. The Flanders family is surrounded by sunshine, chirping birds, angels singing, and all things goodness and light. Marge and Homer are surrounded by a bleak, surreal barren landscape void of life. The children were tempted, but chose their own parents. The Flanders were the obvious "Godly" choice.
Why? because they have had 3 shows which were made up of mostly gays, and also they have movies which come from hollywood which has commies and also they have SNL reruns which sometimes has actors who are commies and also they have cast members who are sometimes commies and sometimes they have bands who are commies.
Maybe that 7th Heaven because the guy is a preacher; although I have never watched.
Then BAM! the smack into each other..."what did we do to make God angry?"
The final arbiter for all faiths is how well it works for and through you. Or as James, the brother of Jesus said, ". . .show me your faith without the works, and I will show you my faith by my works. . .faith without works is useless." James 2:18 & 20.
Maybe she'll uncover more DNC fundraising...
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