- Feb 21, 2007
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Now most of us Christians who have been writing for any period of time longer than two days already know C.S. Lewis' (paraphrased) "We don't need more good writers writing Christian books, we need more Christians writing good books." (again, that is a major paraphrase, I'm not very good with remembering exact quotes, so I compromise (sue me!
)).
Now, as some of you know, I've turned to screenwriting over the past months, and now I write only scripts. But only one of my current/favored scripts is truly about anything Christian, and only one other has Christian principle behind it. The third, and one of my favorites, could even appear anti-Christian in theme and principal if not analyzed correctly (the entire film is written subjectively, with the moral standpoints of the characters (medieval times) most of whom treat violence, murder, and war as a game, and this notion is never disuaded; the only bad result of it is shown in the way that one person gets totally screwed, and winds up having to give his life to bring his master and the person who kills him (kills the man who gives his life, not the master) back to peaceful relations with each other).
I've talked about this on other sites, and I already know where I stand, but I thought that perhaps a bit of discussion could be helpful to those who chance upon it.
So, where does everyone stand on this? Should all our works of art be Christian-based or at least have entirely Christian themes, or should we tell real (as real as fiction gets, anyway
) stories unhindered by a moral message? (I'm not discussing morals here, as in putting swear words and nude people in a film/book, I'm talking about what themes you come across with).
Now, as some of you know, I've turned to screenwriting over the past months, and now I write only scripts. But only one of my current/favored scripts is truly about anything Christian, and only one other has Christian principle behind it. The third, and one of my favorites, could even appear anti-Christian in theme and principal if not analyzed correctly (the entire film is written subjectively, with the moral standpoints of the characters (medieval times) most of whom treat violence, murder, and war as a game, and this notion is never disuaded; the only bad result of it is shown in the way that one person gets totally screwed, and winds up having to give his life to bring his master and the person who kills him (kills the man who gives his life, not the master) back to peaceful relations with each other).
I've talked about this on other sites, and I already know where I stand, but I thought that perhaps a bit of discussion could be helpful to those who chance upon it.
So, where does everyone stand on this? Should all our works of art be Christian-based or at least have entirely Christian themes, or should we tell real (as real as fiction gets, anyway
