Category:Christian Media: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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Works by Christians, for Christians. Many of these are presented as [[The Moral Substitute]] for some variety of [[The New Rock and Roll]] that would otherwise corrupt their souls and pollute their precious bodily fluids, so that they can feel like they participate in the greater culture without sinning as badly as they would by indulging in more secular works. Other examples are evangelical works, tracts, essays or pamphlets intended to convince the sinner to come back to God.
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Most of the time, examples of Christian Media can come across as ham-handed and unsubtle to those who don't follow the faith (or don't follow it in the same way as the creators do). But every once in a while a "Christian" work can gain an unexpected popularity in the greater culture. For those believers who pride themselves on their separatism, this can pose a difficult problem: if it's being enjoyed by non-Christians, is it a good thing, because it gets the Message across to more people who need to hear it? [[Ruined FOREVER|Or is the greater success proof that the Message has been corrupted or diluted -- or worse, was never there at all?]]


[[Category:Index Index]]
[[Category:Index Index]]

Revision as of 16:33, 2 May 2017

Works by Christians, for Christians. Many of these are presented as The Moral Substitute for some variety of The New Rock and Roll that would otherwise corrupt their souls and pollute their precious bodily fluids, so that they can feel like they participate in the greater culture without sinning as badly as they would by indulging in more secular works. Other examples are evangelical works, tracts, essays or pamphlets intended to convince the sinner to come back to God.

Most of the time, examples of Christian Media can come across as ham-handed and unsubtle to those who don't follow the faith (or don't follow it in the same way as the creators do). But every once in a while a "Christian" work can gain an unexpected popularity in the greater culture. For those believers who pride themselves on their separatism, this can pose a difficult problem: if it's being enjoyed by non-Christians, is it a good thing, because it gets the Message across to more people who need to hear it? Or is the greater success proof that the Message has been corrupted or diluted -- or worse, was never there at all?

Subcategories

This category has only the following subcategory.

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Pages in category "Christian Media"

The following 84 pages are in this category, out of 84 total.