Saturday, May 12, 2012

Let us "entertain" you ?????


Let us “entertain” you?
Richard Baxter wrote a short work on the need for believers to be cautious in what they read.  Today, there are more forms of entertainment and leisure habits than just reading.  Between TV, movies, concerts, seminars and talk radio, we are overrun with opportunities to be entertained and gather information.
However, if we are to grow in righteousness we need to be very very careful what we put in our minds and who we allow to put it there.  We must remember that not one iota of data enters our minds that does not have some influence be it immediate or cumulative.

Baxter presents these questions: 
Remember that it is not just books we need to be cautious about
While reading ask oneself:
1. Could I spend this time no better?
2. Are there better books that would edify me more?
3. Are the lovers of such a book as this the greatest lovers of the Book of God and of a holy
   life?
4. Does this book increase my love to the Word of God, kill my sin, and prepare me for the life
   to come?

Ouch!

Entertainments are not in and of themselves evil or bad.  They are however, like candy and not fit for a regular diet. 

Patti and used to watch the show The Glimore Girls.  We were really caught up in their story and the characters.  That is until somehow we began to ask, “What’s the message behind the entertainment?”  As we looked at the characters, the situations they faced and the decisions they made we were shocked that we had never noticed exactly how dysfunctional and sad the show really was.  Where we had laughed we now dropped our jaws and shook our heads in despair.

Remember 24?  Did you get hooked?  What was the message in that show?  What about My Name is Earl?  Anyone up for a cup of Karma?

“Oh, Michael,” you say, “it’s just TV (or books or movies, etc).”  True – but the intent of these shows is to get you to suspend your incredulity and accept, at least some of it, as real.  The only show I can remember that didn’t do that was Dragnet.  You can still catch this on Hulu.  It’s dull, slow and stiff – but, it’s more real than anything since.

What about “reality” shows?  Is that really reality?  Are these “real” people?  Sure they are – but stick a camera crew with anyone and no matter how “real” they are, their “reality” changes.
Even the “News” here in America is a joke.  Do a search on the net for British news shows.  You’ll learn things about our country that are true – that you’ll not hear of US news shows.

Remember that old song, Be Careful Little Eyes What You See?  Well if you think you’ve outgrown it you are fooling yourself.  The “entertainment” industry is first about making money.  Secondly it is about changing culture.  Kirks’ kissing O’Hura is an example – though a good one. 
A mother selling marijuana to support her family is a bad one (Weeds).

Hey, in the end, it’s up to you.  If you want to eat candy all the time and don’t think it will have a deleterious effect – OK.  But just keep in mind that even a tiny piece of leaven affects the whole lump of dough.  A brief exposure to radiation over a long period of time will get you dead.  Arsenic, mercury and lead are necessary but taking in small portion over a long time will kill you.

I was once told by a friend of mine that as they watch a TV show or movie they woulkd always ask, “If the Lord was sitting here, would I change the channel?”

Here’s a challenge.  There’s a show called, The Big Bang Theory.  If the title doesn’t warn you off, watch it – but – take notes.  What preoccupies the characters?  What would you say are their fundamental beliefs?  Notice any stereo-types?  What “world-view” can you pick up?”  Should what makes you laugh make you laugh?

If you don’t want to take the challenge, here’s what WikiP has to say concerning how “religion” is addressed on the show:
Religion plays a minor role in the series. Sheldon was raised in a fundamentalist Christian household. He refers to his childhood as "hell", and a recurrent theme is his conflict with his devout mother, Mary, whose creationist beliefs often clash with Sheldon's understanding of evolution. In "The Lunar Excitation", Sheldon mentions his promise to Mary to attend church once a year. In "The Wheaton Recurrence", after scoring a spare in bowling, Sheldon happily exclaims "Thank you, Jesus! ...as my mother would say." In the episode "The Zarnecki Incursion", Sheldon can be heard exclaiming "Why hast thou forsaken me, o deity whose existence I doubt?"

Howard and Raj are Jewish and Hindu, respectively, and semi-observant, apparently defying many religious customs without worry. They frequently flout dietary prohibitions and tend to give each other grief about them--Raj quotes from the Talmud after Howard eats pork, and Howard sharply says he holds his tongue when Raj eats a Big Mac. Still, Raj mentions reincarnation and karma, and Howard celebrates at least some Jewish holidays and refuses to get tattoos so he "can be buried in a Jewish cemetery". Howard's mother is a caricature of an over-protective Jewish mother.

Neither Leonard's nor Penny's religious convictions are made clear. Leonard approaches Christianity with less skepticism than Sheldon. Penny has expressed belief in ghosts, astrology, psychics and voodoo. Bernadette is Catholic, and is frequently seen wearing a necklace with a cross. And Amy is agnostic, stating in "The Lunar Excitation" that she understands the notion of a deity but is skeptical of one that would take attendance.

In the end, what gets in your mind is up to you – but I encourage you to ask, “Why do I find this entertaining?”  and “Would I invite the Apostle Paul over for pop-corn to watch this with me?  or  “What would an unbelieving acquaintance think of my witness if we were watching this together?”

You may not make you brother or sister stumble – why would you want to make yourself do so?

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