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Christian filmmakers are getting creative…
The knock on Christian films has always been two-fold: poor production values, and a shallow depiction of good and evil with the good guys simply too good and the bad guys utterly soulless. There are some bad folks who are simplistically wicked – I just saw a chilling bit about a euthanasist in Canada who reveled in her death-dealing – but as the Bible shows us with the wise and weak Solomon, the righteous and murderous David, the believing and mistrusting Abraham, God’s people sure aren’t saved by their own merits! Even the best people are seriously flawed.
Now, I’ve only watched the trailer for Average Joe (see below), so I can’t speak to the characterization. But I wanted to share it for the production value side – it shows a level of skilled playfulness that we haven’t seen often in Christian films. Coming out later this year, Average Joe is the true story of a public high school football coach who got in trouble for praying publicly after games. Funnest bit of the trailer is when the coach and his wife break the fourth wall, the two of them sharing their different recollections of a kiss.
I hope the film is as good!
Did God create life on other planets? Otherwise, why is the universe so big?
“The Bible’s ‘big picture’ seems to preclude intelligent life elsewhere” but it wouldn’t seem to preclude something like bacterial life, or even animals, on other planets. So why haven’t we found any?
Might it be because, while the Bible would allow for alien life, evolution needs it? Evolutionists argue that life from non-life is plausible, and if it is, and it has happened here in abundance, then of course it must have happened elsewhere amongst the billions of stars and planets. So the lack of alien life is a message from God – another blessing from Him – highlighting just how impossible life from non-life, without an Omnipotent Creator, really is.
How was the pronunciation of God’s Name lost?
Today Christians treat many words as absolutely forbidden – you won’t find a Christian novel using the F-word, and Christian movies don’t have anyone, even farmers, using the other four-letter word for “poop.” But you will regularly find both using God’s name in vain.
Thousands of years ago, the Israelites had it the other way around, being so careful about God’s Name that the pronunciation of it was lost – no one living today knows how to pronounce YHWH. So, “why did the Israelites go from swearing by Yahweh’s name, and using it in prayer, song, and greetings, to forbidding its use altogether?”
Tim Challies: Stop swiping, start serving
You probably didn’t get drunk this past week. But you likely succumbed to other forms of escapism whether it was hours of video games, Netflix binging, or swiping through your phone’s feed.
11 reasons two-parents is the ideal
Sometimes it isn’t possible, but let’s not lose sight that it should be the goal.
Contra mundum
Here’s one for Church History teachers when you’re tackling Athanasius. And here’s one for politicians when the media, or your party leader, directs their attention your way. And here’s one for all the rest of us when we are tempted to back down, not because we are wrong, but only because we are standing against the room.