Ascension of Hollywood Jesus: Biography of a Website

I don't get offended.  My favorite films are those of Oliver Stone.  Even though I violently disagree with his politics, I appreciate his films because he is more upfront than other filmmakers about making clear what his ideas and positions are.  You know what he is thinking.

Film, like all art, is a form of communication, and the intent of all communication is for the speaker to communicate something to the receiver.  If we approach the theater with the understanding that we are allowing the filmmaker to speak to us for two hours, uninterrupted, with no opportunity for us to object or counter with an argument, then it's a matter of sitting down and attempting to understand what is being said.  When you understand, then you can agree or disagree, and you can offer your response.

But it doesn't require anger.  It doesn't require offense.  It doesn't require any more of a perception of threat than you have in a conversation with your neighbor.  We, as Christians, have fallen victim to the notion that every interaction we have with somebody has got to be something that looks like Fox News, or CNN, or Keith Olbermann.  Shouting at people is not a Christian response.  A Christian response is having a loving conversation, where you care about the person and what they're saying.  That's a Christian response.

 

See Greg Wright's writings at Hollywood Jesus and Past the Popcorn

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3/2/2010 5:00:00 AM
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