I apologize but I am pretty strict on my views of christianity and any form of entertainment or using it as art to me... is idolism, with that I also do not believe in artwork portraying Christ, apostles, the cross... anything.
Cross wrote:I am rather new to anime, while watched for year I have never really got very deep into it so I apologize that I do not make references to any anime/manga in this post but the topic is just too good too pass up.
Cross wrote:My honest opinion is rather that the world is just not ready for christianity as entertainment, it simply is not in form or fashion...how can you make fun out of self-sacrifice and giving up all to make a walk with Christ and simply put why must Americans make this realm a form of entertainment...its needless and it only promotes self-gain regardless of how you look at it, the money goes somewhere and it's a paycheck.
Cross wrote:Jesus never preached about making a movie/game/anime/cartoon/book... He preached about loving one another, following God and putting nothing before Him.
Cross wrote:Frankly put Christianity will never surpass mainstream entertainment because it is not meant to and that is because Christianity is not entertainment and if you think it is then I apologize when I say that you need to re-evaluate things.
Cross wrote:This probably will offend others, especially if you are in the industry of making christianity more fun or "acceptable" to others, but to me it is just conforming to the worldy view and slapping God on it... this is not right in my book and I apologize if I do offend anyone but I feel what I say is true and that I need to share it.
Ashley wrote:While I agree with your point, I'm not sure you can cite Endo fairly. I've read Silence, and I didn't think it was particularly favorable to Christianity.
Cross wrote:I apologize but I am pretty strict on my views of christianity and any form of entertainment or using it as art to me... is idolism, with that I also do not believe in artwork portraying Christ, apostles, the cross... anything.
If you take such a hardball pseudo-legalistic position on this matter, why don't you just be consistent, condemn anime and all artwork as of the idolatrous devilry (for many thousands of paper abominations are created in the making of an animated film), and go find some other hobby? Art of all forms cannot be reduced to mere "entertainment", for there is no such thing as mere entertainment. A lot of artists of different forms have created works teaching love and self sacrifice as Christ did, for example (assuming you do not go into a claustrophobic hysteria and condemn all books except the Bible), John Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress and John Milton's Paradise Regained deals greatly with this subject. Even our Lord Yeshua Christ was a master of the verbal art of storytelling through parables, although naturally this must have merely been a waste of his time to entertain people.Cross wrote:I am rather new to anime, while watched for year I have never really got very deep into it so I apologize that I do not make references to any anime/manga in this post but the topic is just too good too pass up.
My honest opinion is rather that the world is just not ready for christianity as entertainment, it simply is not in form or fashion...how can you make fun out of self-sacrifice and giving up all to make a walk with Christ and simply put why must Americans make this realm a form of entertainment...its needless and it only promotes self-gain regardless of how you look at it, the money goes somewhere and it's a paycheck.
Jesus never preached about making a movie/game/anime/cartoon/book... He preached about loving one another, following God and putting nothing before Him.
Frankly put Christianity will never surpass mainstream entertainment because it is not meant to and that is because Christianity is not entertainment and if you think it is then I apologize when I say that you need to re-evaluate things.
This probably will offend others, especially if you are in the industry of making christianity more fun or "acceptable" to others, but to me it is just conforming to the worldy view and slapping God on it... this is not right in my book and I apologize if I do offend anyone but I feel what I say is true and that I need to share it.
Thou shalt have no other gods before me. Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image, or any likeness of any thing that is in heaven above or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth: thou shalt not bow down thyself to them nor serve them: for I the Lord thy God am a jealous God" (Exodus 20:3-5)
Technomancer wrote:I'm not particularly sure which part of the novel you're referring to, although I would still disagree with you. Granted, the main character in Silence, Sebastian Rodrigues, is in many ways a weak man. However, as with Graham Greene's Whiskey Priest (in The Power and the Glory), it is this very weakness that allows the author to shed light on the difficult problems relating to the nature of faith, doubt, and sacrifice. The goal of both novels is not to so much to evangelize, and certainly not to show the church in a good light, but to illuminate how Christianity works out in the lives of ordinary, flawed people like ourselves.
Cross wrote:You will not like this response as I really do not feel that I need to explain myself to you.
I will leave this though, my thoughts are my own and I dictate no one but myself. I carry my own beliefs as to what I believe is true. What is said by me is my opinion and should be held no further than that, if you like what I say...great, if not take it with a grain of salt and walk the other way.
You want scripture, please read below... I don't particularly care if you said I could not use it... as that would remove the scripture that flat out says it, now if you think Paul and company said "Let there be no stain glass, no movies, no video games" I don't I will find it in a NIV Bible...maybe a more mainstream Bible (some crazy ones out today) but I still doubt it.
I wish I had more for you I really do. You want scripture to back up everything I say but I simply don't have it... I just have my heart and my prayers and what I feel God tells me... that is what I listen to but unfortunately it's not published work... I am sorry.
I should clarify (I am beginning to ramble, sorry) that I am ONLY against images, regardless of what they do for someone... I am against them, I do not believe they have a place in the church. An ideal church to me is 4 walls, a floor and a preacher and congregation...not even pews (sorry if misspelled) only because I feel a congregation should be on their knee's when in worship. No, I am not against singing or standing and jumping during worship music either ]
I'd like to just speak to that last sentence there. First of all, the money. I don't think it's right to say their money only goes towards personal gain. Number one: Surely you don't believe they shouldn't be paid for their work. Number two: the profit in a business goes towards improving the quality of the product.Now if they made games and passed them out for free or all profits went towards a charitable organization that actually did not steal the money and gave it to a worthy cause... THAT'S GREAT, but still falls under the graven images most like since gaming is all about presentation you know... for the most part.
Of course, given the large [and ever-increasing] time and effort it takes to produce a competitive game [although I doubt the Christian game-producing community has seen one <_<], it would be nigh-impossible to give them out for free. And of course, if you give all of your profits to charity, there's no reasonable way to improve your product. And of course, there's the consideration that the work itself is a service ~ you're creating dependable entertainment for fellow Christians. Sounds like a worthy cause to me. As to "gaming is all about presentation" ~ I'd like to know exactly what you mean by this and how you would link skillful presentation [such as good graphics and sound] to idolatry. o_OI believe in what I believe as you believe in what you believe... I respect your opinion as I hope you respect mine... I have no way to fully convince you as you can not convince me, we are locked in a stale mate and it is pointless to debate this. I apologize if I offended you not my intentions... if this is your field, great...wish you the best of luck in this endeavour.
I also have to say I am against christian based games even the Bible trivia stuff for kids mainly because they make God a form of entertainment and the money only goes towards self-gain.
Seems odd that you'd wish someone the best of luck in an endeavour that you consider a sin against God.
kaemmerite wrote:Second, I believe God is entertaining. God created the universe, and everything in it. He created humor. God is a lot of things, holy, righteous, just, and I guarantee He is witty and hilarious as well....
AnimeHeretic wrote:Wasn't this the book that
[spoiler]Had the Priest deny his faith so he would be able to live on and help his people[/spoiler]?
As I recall many Japanese Christians were offended by that book if I recall rightly. Sorry if my 2¢ isn't quite relevant. It just came to mind.
Technomancer wrote:That's not exactly the reason for what for what happened.
This much is true, many felt that it made their ancestors to appear cowardly.
mitsuki lover wrote:The choice is not an easy one as we would presume it to be.Martrydom would in fact be the easy way out for many,but others might have had tougher choices to make which led them to publicly recant their faith.
Fair enough, I'm glad. While a ban upon statues among the Jews would be necessary because of a cultural tendency to create idols and worship them, which would probably be alot worse if they pretended they made them to be art around authorities. Among modern Westerners however, the tendency is more to simply worship one's belly - and people have a great difficulty with taking the worship of statues seriously at all. Thus, in our culture this is not nearly as much of a problem.Cross wrote:With that I will say my views have changed (yes, my thoughts can change as quick as the wind if I am proved wrong) so basically what is my view now? As long as you give credit where credit is due (to God) then what you do is fine...as long as an individual is not worshipping these objects, it is fine.
Cross wrote:With that I will say my views have changed (yes, my thoughts can change as quick as the wind if I am proved wrong) so basically what is my view now? As long as you give credit where credit is due (to God) then what you do is fine...as long as an individual is not worshipping these objects, it is fine.
mitsuki lover wrote:The choice is not an easy one as we would presume it to be.Martrydom would in fact be the easy way out for many,but others might have had tougher choices to make which led them to publicly recant their faith.For example some one who had a wife and children but no-one to take care of them when they died would probably have chosen recantation to martyrdom.Also remember that many who PUBLICLY recanted would have probably SECRETLY unrecanted their recantation.
Note:The early Christians in the Roman Empire faced the same problem of those who publicly recanted their faith but later wished to rejoin after persecution was over.
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