This feature balances the columns heights. To use this feature you must enable javascript.

skip to main content, skip to site links, or skip to search

Jude Miinistry Blog Jude Ministries

Topics

Christianity
Current Events
Education
Pain
Web Site

 

Login Login

 

wk S M T W T F S
49
29
30
01
02
03
04
05
50
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
51
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
52
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
53
27
28
29
30
31
01
02

Search the Blog For

RSS Feed Get Blog as RSS Feed

God's Free Gift

Current Events >> Fantasy Fiction as Christian Stories

Can fantasy be Christian? If so, where do you draw the boundaries?


I recently taught parts of a series on spiritual warfare in Sunday School.  One of the questions from the class has led me to reconsider some of the comments and positions I adopted in the lesson on the occult. 

There is no doubt but what we are under spiritual attack.  In fact, 1 John 3:8 says "But when people keep on sinning, it shows they belong to the Devil, who has been sinning since the beginning. But the Son of God came to destroy these works of the Devil." (NLT).  I use the NLT translation here because it clearly conveys the continual aspect of sinning, not just a once in a while event.  To curse once a quarter may be nothing more than your sin nature trying to get a grip on you.  To curse as a part of natural speech falls under the concept of this verse.  John says that all continual, habitual sinning is caused by spiritual warfare.

If this warfare is all around us, we should carefully consider how we live and react to events of life.  We are called to be Christlike and Paul tells us we have the mind of Christ to accomplish this task (1 Cor 2:16).  We have the weapons if we will only use them.

Anyway, the class discussion focused for a period on fantasy fiction, both written and in the movies.  Was it part of Satan's attack?  Where do you draw the battle lines?  In particular, is there a difference between Harry Potter, The Lord of the Rings, and The Narnia Chronicles (i.e., The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe) of C.S. Lewis.  Where does the difference reside? 

This may, or may not, present a more complex issue than appears on the surface.  For example, almost "everyone" who writes on the topic views Narnia and the Middle Earth stories as Christian, but there is a wide disagreement when it comes to the Harry Potter stories.  Is there?  Should there be?  How should we view fantasy as a category? 

These are questions I am pondering.  Perhaps, they have the making of future polls.  In any event, I will eventually post my thoughts either here or as a new study on the site.  In the meanwhile, I welcome your thoughts and comments.

Jim

 

Posted On: 2005-07-28 16:29:23 || Comments (1 ) || Add a Comment
This page printed from http://www.judeministries.org/blog/index.phpdate=2026-12-22&id_art=4&mod=article_detail.

Copyright © 2001-2024 James G. Arthur and Jude Ministries
Jude Ministries Website Privacy Statement
Comments or Questions? Email Us
November 25, 2024

This site is prepared with
Made with Macromedia Studio and extensions from InterAKT Online Dreamweaver Extensions
Powered by PHP

Powered by MySQL

Interested in web standards and compliance? You can validate this page at the links below,
but see comments in the Blog (Topic - Web Site) about why some (most) pages will not validate.
XHTML  508 UsableNet Approved (v. 1.2.1.1)    CSS