shooraijin (post: 1440935) wrote:This is a good point worth reiterating -- there are a lot of people who will praise what are otherwise dire albums, movies, books, etc., just because they're Christian. I know from my non-Christian friends that this just looks dumb to them, and it is.
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I think that all things that praise are praiseworthy, but that doesn't necessarily make them art or even entertaining. Particularly for my non-Christian friends, I try to recommend to them things that are Christian *and* good. If it's not good, why would I make them suffer through it?
I absolutely agree - let's face it, a lot of "Christian" media isn't that great. For example,
Facing the Giants is mediocre at best, especially compared to,
Remember the Titans, which deals with some of the same themes and settings, and while it's not explicitly Christian, it still expresses very Christian values. A huge problem with Christian media is that it puts the message over the craftsmanship in the vast majority of cases, ending in stories that are preachy and/or predictable rather than entertaining. Worse still, people buy them and praise them because they're Christian rather than on their quality, resulting in things like
C Me Dance, which, well, just look at that trailer. Write your stories as something you'd want to read, and your views and what you're trying to express will flow naturally into the story.
A related side note:
The Game Plan comes up a lot when we're discussing Christian manga - I'm not familiar with the conventions of shojo manga and if it's always like this, and I'm out of the demographic for it, but I could see the twists and how it would end pretty early on. Sure, it's drawn well, but the story doesn't keep up with it.
We are loved even though we suck.
Psalms 37:37 (NHEB)
Mark the perfect man, and see the upright, for there is a future for the man of peace.