Posts Tagged ‘ Christianity ’

More “Supernatural” Religion

February 8, 2007
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More “Supernatural” Religion

Tonight’s episode of the CW program Supernatural follows up on the religious themes of last week’s installment (see below), with a decidedly more sinister bent. In this episode, Sam Winchester is possessed by a demon—the very one he and his brother have been hunting in hopes of destroying it. The episode includes some interesting and reasonable discussion of moral culpability, as the demon uses Sam’s body to commit some murders which Sam himself, of course, would never do. Although the producers include a bit of mumbo-jumbo in the story, it is clearly for dramatic purposes, and the theology is decidedly Christian. In all, the program seems to be moving toward a more explicitly Christian approach to its subject matter.  

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Rocky Balboa, Christian Warrior

December 31, 2006
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Rocky Balboa, Christian Warrior

Your correspondent has been very busy with other work during the past week and has neglected his work here, for which he apologizes profusely. During this hectic time, however, we did manage to take a couple of hours to see Rocky Balboa, the sixth and supposedly last of actor/writer/director Sylvester Stallone’s Rocky films. Stallone has promoted the film aggressively to Christian audiences, pointing out that he has become much more greatly committed to Christianity (and jolly good for him!), specifically the Catholicism in which he was brought up.  Stallone says that the character of Rocky Balboa always had a strong element of Stallone’s Christian thought behind him: It’s like he was being chosen, Jesus was over him, and he was going to be the fella that would live through the example of Christ," Stallone said. "He’s very, very forgiving. There’s no bitterness in him. He always turns the other cheek. And it’s like his whole life was about service. Those are reasonable claims about Rocky, and of course his Christian name is a clear and rather charming reference to the disciple Peter (whose name, Petra, means "rock" and whose clear statement of Jesus’s divinity was the "rock" on which Jesus

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A Christmas Film to Remember

December 17, 2006
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A Christmas Film to Remember

  Tonight at 8 p.m. EST, Turner Classic Movies is showing an excellent Christmas film, one which I recommend highly. Remember the Night (1940) stars Barbara Stanwyck as Lee Leander, a beautiful shoplifter in a big city (New York City, I think), whose court case is continued until after Christmas by clever assistant district attorney John Sargent (Fred MacMurray, who would costar with Stanwyck in Billy Wilder’s 1944 venture into film noir, Double Indemnity), who realizes that no jury will convict her right before Christmas. When Lee is led away to jail, however, Sargent’s conscience convicts him, and he posts bail for her. Lee, however, has no money and nowhere to go, so when he discovers that she is from Indiana, where he is about to go to visit his family for Christmas, he offers to drive her to her mother’s house. Lee’s mother, however, despises her because Lee never could live up to the puritanical woman’s perfectionist standards of behavior, and the mother coldly turns Lee away at the door. Jack begins to understand how Lee ended up as a thief and so tough herself (to steel herself against the hurts she is sure are always on the way),

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Religion in “Bones”

November 16, 2006
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Religion in “Bones”

Another in our ongoing chronicle of fictional TV programs’ treatment of religion . . . In last night’s episode of the Fox mystery-criime series Bones, "Aliens in a Spaceship," Jeffersonian Institution scientists and crimefighters Brennan (Emily Deschanel) and Hodgins are buried alive by a serial killer—known as the Grave Digger—and held for ransom, which the corporation to which the demand was made is unable to pay. After a timely resurrection, Brennan and her usual partner, FBI agent Booth (David Boreanaz), are in a Catholic church. Booth rises from his knees after prayer and sits beside Brennan in the front pew. They discuss religion, as they frequently do. Brennan takes her usual straight-materialist-atheist position, and Booth speaks from his Catholic point of view. Neither tries to persuade the other to change their mind, though both are firm in their convictions. What is exemplary about the scene is the maturity of their conversation about religion. Brennan sees it all in scientific, materialistic terms, as a matter of probabilities that sometimes come to pass, and Booth sees it in more spiritual terms, seeing God looking down on their team and answering Booth’s prayers so that the team can continue to do their work.

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The Real D-Wade

November 3, 2006
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The Real D-Wade

Miami Heat NBA superstar Dwyane Wade has a new slate of commercials appearing on television as the pro basketball season starts, and they’re an interesting phenomenon. Directed by Spike Lee, the commercials purport to show the "real" Dwyane Wade, the man behind the basketball player. Mostly, they are just shots of Wade sitting on a chair on a basketball court, talking directly to the camera. As the Sun-Sentinal reports: From behind the camera, Lee asks Wade questions about his life on and off the basketball court in what’s being described as something of a fireside chat. “My whole concept this year is going with the real me,” Wade said. “It’s about letting people get to know who Dwyane Wade is. So he’s asking me personal questions that maybe my fans won’t know about basketball, off the court.” The messages are simple and direct, largely about the value of hard work, dedication, and other good things. One stands out as unusual, however: Wade talks about how his relationship with God is at the center of his life and is his greatest motivation. It’s a very sincere and, for me, an appealing spot, and clearly it was important to Wade to have

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CSI Gets Religion Big-Time

October 20, 2006
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CSI Gets Religion Big-Time

Religion is all over the place on network TV series now. Many programs just can’t seem to resist bringing it up, and the treatments are typically fairly sympathetic though by no means without nuance or sophistication. For example: following up on last week’s interesting comment at the end of the program, in which CSI team leader Gil Grissom suggests a sense of moral decline in America (see my article of last week on that episode), last night’s episode of CSI: Crime Scene Investigation moved thoroughly into spiritual and religious territory. The story concerns the investigation into the death of a woman found crucified in the sanctuary of a Catholic church, having been beaten previously and strangled by a rosary. Much suspicion is directed toward a Catholic priest and an automobile dealer, both of whom have known the woman since high school. The priest, it turns out, was having an affair with the woman. The church holds some very unhappy secrets, you see. But the episode is no slam at the church—it is instead a fairly sophisticated look at how flawed human beings try to live out their relationship with God, and how those who don’t have such a relationship get

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