Eugene David ...The One-Minute Pundit |
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Thursday, December 01, 2005
"They don't want to see the film treated in such a manner that it'd be inappropriately pigeonholed," said Stanley Mattson, president of the C.S. Lewis Foundation in Redlands, Calif.
"There are powerful themes that resonate with the whole Judeo-Christian tradition, but it's a book with universal appeal," Mr. Mattson said. Cultural elites attach disgrace to anything judged "Christian," he said. "It's synonymous to 'reactionary,' 'knee-jerk' and 'fundamentalist,'?" Mr. Mattson said. "The problem now is that when Christians do great work, they hide their Christianity out of a sense of embarrassment to avoid the inappropriate stereotype." Hmmm, this wouldn't be this year's pseudo-religious version of AUDREY'S MONSTER, d'ya think?
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