Category - culture

1
Why You Don’t Need to Marry Augustus Waters
2
TV Show Review: Resurrection
3
Christ in our Coffee Shops
4
Christ in our Writing
5
Christ in the App Store

Why You Don’t Need to Marry Augustus Waters

The_Fault_in_Our_Stars

Augustus Waters’ name was spoken so many times by the middle school girls in my Sunday School class that you would have thought he was a boy in our youth group rather than a character in a #1 New York Times Bestseller book. Naturally, I was curious as to what drew such attention to this book, especially since it lacked zombies and werewolves (perhaps this is the end of that trend – I do hope so).

I borrowed The Fault in Our Stars and found that I read the book in its entirety that Sunday afternoon. From an initial cultural standpoint, I was excited to realize that the author is John Green, vlogger of Mental Floss. As an English Major with an emphasis in Creative Writing, I was fascinated that this male author had chosen to narrate the book from the point of view of the female character.

The first line of the book drew me in,

Late in the winter of my seventeenth year, my mother decided I was depressed, presumably because I rarely left the house, spent quite a lot of time in bed, read the same book over and over, ate infrequently, and devoted quite a bit of my abundant free time to thinking about death.

Our coming of age love story sums up like this: Hazel, miraculously recovering from thyroid cancer that moved to her lungs, meets Augustus “Gus” Waters, osteosarcoma survivor (who lost a leg to it), and the two fall in love.

What kept me glued to the couch that day (other than a 100 degree fever), was the heads on approach that John Green took to the issue of religion and belief in these two characters who had both faced their own potential death as teenagers.

Characters can struggle with beliefs. In fact, Kate Weiss recently wrote a guest blog on this very subject. After all, if a novel is based on reality, don’t we all struggle occasionally? And I would even say that I do not have a problem with characters who have not fully formed their beliefs before the novel is over. But I do think that in order for me to endorse a book, I need to see glimpses of the truths found in Scripture.

But my middle school girls didn’t chatter about the truths of the book, they fantasized marrying Gus.

Read More

TV Show Review: Resurrection

LOGO_-ONAIR_Resurrection_57778_302__140307200731

From the moment the first commercial echoed the a capella words “I’m coming home, coming home, tell the world I’m coming home” I wanted to know how ABC’s new show Resurrection would mirror culture’s desire to have life after death.

After all, this is the same station that has heaped a pile of shows I refuse to watch: Grey’s Anatomy, Modern Family, Nashville, Revenge, Scandal, Betrayal, Desperate Housewives, Trophy Wife, The Bachelor / Bachelorette, and Dancing with the Stars. (I will make four exceptions: Once Upon a Time and Marvel’s Agents of Shield (though I have not watched them), Wipe Out and our house’s favorite, Shark Tank.

ABC does not reflect my family or my family’s values. With our little spare time, we have become increasingly choosy about the television shows that we do watch. But the echoes of “coming home” triggered a deep desire to hunt for the moral truths in Resurrection.

Read More

Christ in our Coffee Shops

Cup of Coffee with box of cookies with title

Today’s blog was guest written by Jewel Evans. To read the Christ in Culture blog from the beginning, click here.

The alarm goes off at 5 am; Monday morning has arrived, like clockwork. It’s time to get up and get the shop open. I keep the lights low, allowing myself a few quiet moments before the NOW BREWING sign flashes brightly in the early morning light. In a little while, my coworker, Alicia, will show up and we will begin our day, serving cups of coffee and tea to the downtown crowd as they make their way into work.

There are moments in the day, especially in the early hours, that provide her and I ample opportunity to talk and catch up about our weekend happenings. My coworker is a nursing student, lives in the historic part of town, and is generally a sweet and enjoyable young woman. As we sip coffee together, our routine of months and months of Monday mornings spent together, she asks me this question: “Do you go to church every Sunday?” It caught me off guard. It took me a minute to respond, recalling just what I told her a moment ago.

Read More

Christ in our Writing

writing for blog-01

Today’s Blog is Guest-written by Kate C. Weise. To read this month’s series from the beginning, click here.

 

When I tell people I write, I get one response:

*crickets chirping*

Which I think is very strange. After all, we live in a world saturated with story. Turn on the TV. Story, story, story (yes, even commercial breaks use Aristotle’s 3-part story structure). Humans love stories. We all tell them. We all experience them. And we all need them.

Ask yourself: what would my life be without story?

I’ll tell you: Nothing.

You’re a character in one of the greatest stories ever told in a crazy imaginative world. And God is telling this story for the heck of it.

Read More

Christ in the App Store

 

To read this series, Christ & Culture, from the beginning, click here.
screen480x480

Flappy Bird, originally released in May, became the top free iPhone app mid-January. However, in an unforeseen turn of events, its creator, Don Nguyen, took the app off the store yesterday. According to CNN, the game had an average four-star rating from more than 543,000 reviews in the Apple App Store and 228,000 on Android.

For those of you who didn’t get to experience the maddening addiction of Flappy Bird, the object is to tap the screen to bounce an odd-looking yellow bird through the air without hitting the pipes or the ground. Sound simple? It should, with all logic, be. But Flappy Bird defied logic and became the most frustratingly obsessive game on the app store.

On the iPhone, my high score was 1 but on the iPad, I reached a whopping 5. Most of the addiction comes from that part of your brain where you know – you just know – that you can do better. So you play just one more game … just one more game … just one more game …

Read More

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

Copyright © 2013. Pedestrian God Ministires