Tenshi no Ai wrote:The whole 'dumb kids' thing is well... do you REALLY think many kids will even get the message?
I mean, people write books with Christian themes like CS Lewis, many have pretty much neutral themes (as far as religion goes) like Rowling, Japanese have Christian themes but fantasize it greatly, being not their culture, but for this guy to go as far as to DISS it??
I mean, don't think even Da Vinci Code did that. Then again, what's a worse message? "Christianity is fake" or Chrisitianity is BAD BAD BAAAAAAD!!!"
trailer wrote:"That is heresy!"
"That is the truth."
Etoh*the*Greato wrote:The first book, I'm told by a friend who read it, does not have much of a hint of anti-religiosity at all. The second book, only a little bit if you really construe things. I've not heard from her on the topic of the third book, but... I have to be entirely honest, my reaction to this entire email has been tainted largely by the negative press surrounding Harry Potter and the Da Vinci Code. Both showed different sides to Christians overreacting to something that largely did not need overreacting to.
Tenshi no Ai wrote:I'm actually curious as to just how bad the dissing is. I mean, the site says somethign about a portrayal of 'Adam and Eve' trying to 'kill God'. Now, something in that sense sounds like something out of an anime, really.
For me, Harry Potter is an awsome series, Da Vinci is just dumb if people turn fiction into reality (although more of the whole tomb press in the recent year doesn't help, but you know), but I'm curious if it's something you read and go 'hey that's not very nice '. Not that CS Lewis was perfect, with allusions of the one people (can't remember their names) that seemed Middle Eastern seem like the bad guys of the story (if, it is a racism thing after all, but back in those days were different anyhow).
Any examples on the actual BASHING, or is it just more in a sense negativity?
Scarecrow wrote:Yes... I was planning on seeing this but I don't think I will anymore. A ticket for this is a vote for Pullman. And I can't stand Pullman. Reading any of his interviews is enough to make your blood boil.
A while back I was interested in buying the book Paradise Lost by John Milton (where Pullman got the title of his trilogy from). Well, I was at borders and found it but in HUGE red letters under the title it said something like: Forward and chapter analysis by Philip Pullman. It was a nice hardbound edition with nice pictures but having his name even printed on the cover let alone a forward and chapter analysis was enough for me to pass.
I haven't really been back to look for another edition but anyway... got a little hesitant to buy a book Pullman endorses so much... I haven't figured out why a poem about the garden of eden, the fall of Satan etc has this guy wooing over it even going so far as to name his trilogy after a line in the poem. As far as I know the author was a Christian in the 1600s but I'm a little fuzzy on what Pullman sees so appealing in it. Never read the poem myself.
ClosetOtaku wrote:
For the past two years, I've hosted a Halloween party at my house.
I read all the Harry Potter books, and enjoyed them all.
I played D&D throughout High School, and played as recently as two years ago, and enjoyed it.
I read the entire Pullman trilogy. In the third book, The Amber Spyglass, Pullman is unquestionably, unhesitatingly bashing Christianity. I do not currently have the book handy, but I recall summarizing many of his quotations as saying "All who believe in Christianity are victims of a sad mistake".
I am not simply against the Trilogy because I am some Christian activist who doesn't like secular things. I am against the Trilogy because it is a clear case of anti-Christian bigotry.
ClosetOtaku wrote:I think there is some reluctance to characterize the His Dark Materials trilogy as anti-Christian, in light of some of the "typical" push-back from Christian circles on things like Halloween, Harry Potter, and D&D.
For the past two years, I've hosted a Halloween party at my house.
I read all the Harry Potter books, and enjoyed them all.
I played D&D throughout High School, and played as recently as two years ago, and enjoyed it.
I read the entire Pullman trilogy. In the third book, The Amber Spyglass, Pullman is unquestionably, unhesitatingly bashing Christianity. I do not currently have the book handy, but I recall summarizing many of his quotations as saying "All who believe in Christianity are victims of a sad mistake".
I am not simply against the Trilogy because I am some Christian activist who doesn't like secular things. I am against the Trilogy because it is a clear case of anti-Christian bigotry.
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