Hats wrote:"Frodo! Cast off your [s]sins[/s] into the fire!"
Ante Bellum wrote:I also have to throw in the fact that, just because an author is Christian, doesn't mean that the work will be 100% "Christian friendly."
Nate (post: 1432396) wrote:That can be true too, though that also varies depending on how you define "Christian-friendly." Some people take it to mean zero objectionable content, so if you had a series that promoted Christianity but there was sex or nudity in it, despite the message, some people would call that not Christian-friendly.
There also could be doctrinal differences that would cause some people to reject the label "Christian-friendly" but I won't go into detail on those.
Nate (post: 1432384) wrote:Also, quick tip. If you're going to flip out every time a series does or says something not Christian, you might want to look for a different hobby than anime since only around 1-2% of Japan is Christian.
Yuki-Anne wrote:I think people are so focused on making something that won't offend other Christians that they abandon all possible originality.
Yuki-Anne (post: 1432453) wrote:Here's my thing about entertainment, especially when it comes from other cultures:
Entertainment, whether it be television, music, or the written word, gives you a window into someone else's soul. I don't agree with every author's worldview. But I think that certain entertainment that isn't crude for crudity's sake has value as a way to understand how someone entirely unlike myself thinks. I was raised Christian, so I really have no idea how a secular humanist sees the world, and I have even less of an idea how a Shinto Buddhist sees the world. So seeing that worldview portrayed in entertainment has value for me because it helps me understand that way of thinking better.
Acts 17:22-34 is Paul's famous Mars Hill sermon, and if you go read it, you will notice that Paul doesn't witness to the people of Athens through the Bible. Rather, he uses their own entertainment as a way of appealing to their way of thinking. In verse 28, Paul quotes their own literature: "As some of your own poets have said, 'We are his offspring.'"
I highly doubt that those poets were talking explicitly about the God of the Hebrews. I may be going out on a limb here, but I think if we were to read the original poetry that Paul was talking about, we might find some "offensives" in it. This was a polytheistic society, after all.
I don't mean to sound like I'm attacking you or anything. But the truth is, I see little value in "Christian" entertainment, partially because most of it is actually pretty awful quality-wise (and as a result isn't a very good witnessing tool, because if even I as a Christian have a hard time sitting through something like it, then I have a hard time believing that a whole lot of non-Christians would find it convicting and uplifting), but also because it's a worldview I already understand quite well.
You seem to also have noticed the lack of quality. Personally, I find it quite frustrating. I think people are so focused on making something that won't offend other Christians that they abandon all possible originality.
When I see something I disagree with in anime, I tend to see it as a reminder to pray, not a reason to get offended.
Ante Bellum (post: 1432529) wrote:I heard Serenity wasn't that good, actually.
Radical Dreamer (post: 1432520) wrote:I agree with this post 150%. A somewhat related article:
Art isn't Supposed to be Safe
the article wrote:I’m talking about things like redemption, peace, beauty and hope. These things can only exist when we tap into the creative heart of God.
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