Morality at the movies

moviepopcorn.jpgSo it’s Friday and you’re thinking about catching a movie this weekend. 

You’re trying to find a family friendly movie. Read on:

Screenwriter Teri Haux says she grew up loving movies so much she knew she wanted to write them.

Haux has written a new book “Movie Viewer Extraordinaire: Discerning the Influences of Movies on Your Freedom, Family and Happiness.”

She offers the following tips for families looking for movies that match their morals:

1. Choose the morals and standards you want to live by. Examine the ideas and concepts that are important to you, and that you want to pass on to your children. Before you understand what you don’t want in a movie, you really need to come to terms with the things that you DO want. Make your choices your standards, and use them as the guidelines to navigate your family’s movie wish list.

2. Regulate ALL media that you and your family experience. For all the people who want to ban certain films and television shows, the truth is that it is far easier to simply choose and guide what your own family watches. Movies that feature more sex or violence than we would like will always be around. We simply don’t have to watch them. The natural extension of that is being a vigilant parent who knows not only what your kids are doing, but also what they are watching.

3. Reinforce positive influences and minimize the negative. Short of editing the movies yourselves, you likely won’t movieviewer.jpgeliminate all vestiges of the negative elements of modern movies. Talk to your kids about some of the things that they see, and ensure they understand the context of the actions. Silence in the presence of harmful examples is an implied endorsement.

4. Trust your feelings. Movies do more than entertain. They touch our emotions, so if we are previewing a movie, and it feels wrong (or right), chances are it is. These are individual choices, and we need to trust our guts sometimes.   

5. Use movies to complement dreams, interests and talents. Since we already know that children emulate what they see on film and television, why not expose them to a diet of movies that actually inspires them and speaks to interests and talents they may already exhibit.  One of the most valuable things movies do for us is that they take us to new places and show us things we might never see on our own, allowing us to live our dreams vicariously through the cinematic experience. When we choose movies that connect to our aspirations, the potential for inspiration is limitless.

Carla Hinton

Religion Editor

  


On TV: Evolutionary Evangelist

michaeldowd.jpgMichael Dowd, the self-described “Evolutionary Evangelist,” will be featured on ABC Nightline on Friday.

In the Oklahoma City metro area, Nightline airs at 10:35 p.m. on Cox Channel 8. 

Dowd, author of the new book “Thank God for Evolution,” is to tour Oklahoma next month.

We included some of the dates and locations of his tour with a story about Darwin Day and Evolution Weekend that ran on the cover of the Feb. 7 Life section.

I’ve since learned that more Oklahoma tour stops have been added.

Here are the dates and locations: 

Sunday, March 01, 2009

10:00 am

Forum | “The Epic of Evolution: Our Common Creation Story”

All Souls Unitarian Church

2952 South Peoria Ave, Tulsa, OKLAHOMA 74114

(918) 743-2363

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Monday, March 02, 2009

7:00 pm

Presentation | “Thank GOD for EVOLUTION”

First Christian Church

3700 N Walker Ave

Oklahoma City, OKLAHOMA 73118

(405) 525-6551

—–

Wednesday, March 04, 2009

7:00 pm

Presentation | “The Gospel According to Science: Evolutionary Good News”

All Souls Unitarian Church

2952 South Peoria Ave

Tulsa, OKLAHOMA 74114

(918) 743-2363

—-

Thursday, March 05, 2009

7:00 pm

Presentation | “Thank GOD for EVOLUTION”

Church of the Open Arms

United Church of Christ

3131 N Pennsylvania Ave

Oklahoma City, OKLAHOMA 73103

(405) 525-9555

—-

Sunday, March 08, 2009

10:00 am

Lifespan Education Class

First Unitarian Church

600 NW 13th St

Oklahoma City, OKLAHOMA 73103

(405) 232-9224

—-

Sunday, March 08, 2009

11:00 am

Sermon | “Thank GOD for EVOLUTION”

First Unitarian Church

600 NW 13th St

Oklahoma City, OKLAHOMA 73103

(405) 232-9224

Monday, March 09, 2009

7:00 pm

Presentation | “Thank GOD for EVOLUTION” by Michael Dowd

UU Community Church

205 West Main St

Norman, OKLAHOMA 73069

(405) 447-6138

—-

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

7:00 am

Presentation | “The Gospel According to Science: Evolutionary Good News”

UU Church

320 S Stallard St

Stillwater, OKLAHOMA 74074

(405) 372-0620 

—-

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

7:00 pm

Presentation | “The Gospel According to Science: Evolutionary Good News”

First Unitarian Church

600 NW 13th St

Oklahoma City, OKLAHOMA 73103

(405) 232-9224

Carla Hinton

Religion Editor


More on “Faith of Barack Obama”

smansfield-0808-photo.JPGfaithofbarack.jpgAuthor Stephen Mansfield (pictured at right) had much to say about his new book “The Faith of Barack Obama.”

As promised in today’s edition of The Oklahoman, here is more of my Q&A interview with Mansfield: 

Q: In a brief synopsis about your book, you said that you think Obama will continue some of Bush’s faith-based initiatives and that he would probably continue some of the policies oriented toward bringing faith in the public square. Can you talk about that?

A: Most Democrat politicians of the last few decades, even if they were people of faith themselves like Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton, came into office, they said they had a faith, they talked about their faith publicly, but they also believed in separation of church and state, that they wouldn’t bring their faith to bear in the Oval Office, that they would simply do the will of the people.

Barack Obama is different. Barack Obama absolutely says ‘I am a Christian of a certain kind and I am going to bring my faith to bear in the Oval Office. I’m going to welcome clergy in. I’m going to make a case for some policies from the basis of my faith.’ For example, he says he’s going to continue Bush’s faith-based initiatives. So that’s the difference with Barack Obama. He’s a Democrat and a left-leaning politician who is not saying I’m going to be secular about my approach to public policy. He’s saying I’m going to bring my theological liberalism and my Christianity to bear on what’s going on in the Oval Office and the policies of my administration. He’s going to be as faith-based as George (W.) Bush is, but it’s going to be coming from a different kind of Christian theology, a very liberal form of Christian theology.

Q: Can you think of anything else you would like to add?

A:  I think the big thing that people need to be watching is what happens at the inaugural service and the church that Obama chooses. I think the inaugural service is when the president sort of gets to give his theological stamp. There will be some sort of prayer and there will probably be allusions to faith in his speeches. And of course, sometime soon he’s going to have to choose a church in

Washington, D.C. He’ll probably choose a United Church of Christ church. It will be interesting to see what he chooses in terms of ethnic mix and all that kind of thing. Those are the kinds of things to be watching to really see how this administration is going to unfold religiously.

Carla Hinton

Religion Editor

      

          

 


Finding room at the inn

The Rev. George Back and his book “Christmas Joy: Let Heaven and Nature Sing” came into my life at just the right time.

If you’ve ever had something happen that you can’t quite define as coincidence, you will understand what I am saying.

Due to an upcoming assignment and the very premise of Christmas, I had been thinking of Joseph and his pregnant wife Mary and their search for shelter thousands of years ago.

The phrase that kept ringing in my mind as I have heard the story told through songs and oration, “Is there room in the inn?”

One particular day, it struck me personally, that Christ asks on a daily basis “is there room” in one’s heart for Him?

Then I picked up Dean Back’s book and it opened to the page that included the following essay:

“Baby Jesus as Spiritual Guide”

The Gospel of Luke tells the story about how Mary and Joseph brought baby Jesus into the temple when he was eight days old. Many old people like Simeon and Anna came to the temple in order to spend their final days in the presence of God, then to die and be buried in that holy place.

When Jesus was brought as a baby into the temple, old Simeon and old Anna immediately saw what their souls yearned for. They had come to the holy polace to complete their lives, and in looking at this newborn, they saw fulfillment of life.

“Now let your servant depart in peace,” proclaimed Simeon.

What he meant was, “I have seen God’s presence in this baby and now I am ready to be born from above.”

Birth and death, breathing in and breathing out, beginning and end, new and old — all these counterparts belong to one spiritual stream of divine grace.

The treasure of a pilgrim’s soul lies in the immensity of its immaturity. Within this immaturity lies the possibility for freedom, growth and development.

Babies rejoice in spiritual incompleteness; they don’t worry about their weakness and incompetence. A baby enjoys being merely a baby.

Likewise, we should let our souls rejoice that we have so far to grow.

When Mary realizes that she is pregnant with God she sings the first Christmas carol. It is the song of one who is mired deep in a poverty of spirit, but who then recognizes the immense possibility of God alive within her. Like Anna and Simeon who came to die but see abundance of life, Mary sees the glory of god springing forth from the depths of her humility.  So it is that Mary sings the words we now call “The Magnificat”:

My soul magnifies the Lord,

my spirit rejoices in God my Saviour,

for he regards the lowliness of his handmaiden (Luke 1:46-47).

The spiritual pilgrim will see in the baby a helpful guide. Babies live by grace, not by competence. They ask for food from the center of their hunger.

Jesus teaches his followers to pray to his Father in heaven, who knows how to give good gifts to us. In Gospel parables he urges us to pester God — like the persistent widow who nags the dishonest judge, or like the host who annoys his neighbor in order to provide hospitality for a guest.

Do not attempt to speak to God from a posture of confidence in your worthiness, but from your spiritual, intellectual and emotional neediness.

Like Anna and Simeon, seek God in your dying. Like Mary, the unmarried-yet-expectant mother, seek God from your humiliation.

Like a baby, cry deeply from an empty stomach, to be filled with the presence of God.

——-

Dean Back’s book is available at the St. Paul’s Episcopal Cathedral bookstore and Full Circle Bookstore in 50 Penn Place.

Carla Hinton

Religion Editor     


Oct. 26: Faith Bookshelf

newsarahpalinbook1.jpgGov. Sarah Palin of Alaska is the subject of a new book highlighted in today’s “Faith Bookshelf.”

“Sara Palin: A New Kind of Leader” is a biography by Joe Hilley (Zondervan).

The book explores themes from her career in politics, her life as a hockey mom and her strongly held Christian faith, explaining how they influence her new style of leadership.

Other books on tap today are:

“The Mission Minded Family: Releasing Your Family to God’s Destiny” by Ann Dunagan (Authentic).missionminded.jpg

Author, teacher and missionary Ann Dunagan shows parents how to combat the influences of the “Me Generation” by giving readers the tools to revolutionize their families into ones dedicated to fulfilling God’s will and potential, instead of their own.

And:

“Searching for a Better God” by Wade Bradshaw (Paternoster).

searching.jpgIn his new book, author and pastor Wade Bradshaw explains and examines the repercussions of the “common sense theology” which has condemned the God of the Bible as vindictive, angry, distant — and worse.

“People cannot flourish without hope,” Bradshaw said. “Yet this growing suspicion that God exists but is not worthy of our affection or devotion is subtly robbing the world of its one true hope.”

Carla Hinton

Religion Editor  


Heaven on Earth

visionsofparadise.jpgWhat’s your vision of heaven on earth?

National Geographic wants to know.

In conjunction with Tuesday’s release of its new book “Visions of Paradise(National Geographic Books, $35),” National Geographic is inviting the general public to submit images that best represent their unique vision of heaven on Earth to the “Visions of Paradise Photography Contest” that continues through Dec. 21.

Each week 20 Editor’s Picks will be selected from qualified entries and posted on the Web site at www.nationalgeographic.com/myvision. Viewers will be able to vote for their favorites by going online to the site.

At the end of the submission process, Editor’s Picks also will be judged by an expert panel of photographers and art directors who will selected a final list of 20 official winners.

Winning photographs will be posted on the site and each winner will receive a customized copy of “Visions of Paradise” with their winning photograph as the cover image.

The book released this week features 155 images from 82 renowned National Geographic photographers, conveying their ideas of “heaven on Earth.”  

 Carla Hinton

Religion Editor


Oct. 19 Faith Bookshelf

completeidiots.jpgThis week’s Faith Bookshelf is a mixed bag — no certain theme, just several books that have been released recently:

1. “The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Middle East Conflict” by Mitchell G. Bard, Ph.D ($19.95, released September 2008).

This updated guide provides readers with an intense look at current events and the ever-changing political and social landscape, as well as the history — ancient and modern — of this region. 

2. “Being Christian: Exploring Where You, God and Life Connect,” by Stephen being-christian.jpgArterburn and John Shore ($19.99, Bethany House/Baker Publishing Group, released September 2008).

While the spiritual beliefs of the current political candidates are being heavily scrutinized, bestselling authors Arterburn and Shore bring an insightful, accessible, and comprehensive guide to the core truths of Christian faith. In an easy-to-use question-and-answer format, the authors address the most pressing questions and faith concerns for new and veteran believers as well as seekers and outside observers. 

3. “Salvation on the Small Screen: 24 Hours of Christian Television” by Nadia Bolz-Weber ($17, Seabury Books, released September 2008).

salvationonthesmallscreen.jpgFrom 5 a.m. Nov. 2 to 5 a.m. Nov. 3 2007, Bolz -Weber watched the Trinity Broadcasting Network for 24 consecutive hours to gain a theological perspective on Christian cable TV — plus to chronicle its star televangelists, prosperity gospel fare, use of the Bible, and product offerings. She invited 28 contributors, including biblical scholars, several Jews, her Evangelical parents, Lutheran pastors and her 9-year-old daughter, to drop in and comment. The result is a high-octane narrative.

Carla Hinton

Religion Editor


“Love Dare” on bestsellers list

lovedare1.jpgAs the faith-themed movie “Fireproof” continues to hold its own as one of the Top 10 feature films since its September premiere, a book that started out as a central plot device in the storyline has soared to the top of a bestsellers list.

“The Love Dare” hit No. 1 on the New York Times Paperback Advice Bestsellers. It was written by Stephen and Alex Kendrick as part of “Fireproof.” When they wrote the script for the film they knew they would have to expand the six days of the book seen in the film into a book covering all 40 days.

The book is a 40-day challenge to put unconditional love into action.

“The Love Dare” is in paperback, but a leather-bound edition is set to be released in January 2009. 

 To link to an Oct. 4 story and podcast with “The Love Dare” co-author Stephen Kendrick, click here: “Love Dare Q&A.”

Carla Hinton

Religion Editor


Oct. 12 Faith Bookshelf

With America’s economic crisis on everyone’s mind, here are several new book releases that highlight a faithful response to money, budgeting and the marketplace:

charting.jpg“Charting the Course: Values for Navigating Life in the Marketplace,” by Bruce Howard (Authentic Publishing, released April 2008, $12.99).

In his new book, Howard grapples with the dilemma of reconciling fixed, transcendent moral values with an economic system based on relative value. Howard, professor of economics and finance at Wheaton College, insists there is a way to moved forward, that we can influence the economy in a way that will bring positive change to the world.

“Good Intentions: Nine Hot-Button Issues Viewed Through the Eyes of goodintentions.jpgFaith,”by Bob Smietana and Charles North (Moody Publishers, released January 2008, $13.99).

This book attempts to simplify some solid economic principles as they intertwine with faith and our everyday lives. It is full of compelling stories, a faith-minded perspective and an economi expertise that is unique in the marketplace today.

“Jewish Wisdom for Business Success: Lessons from the Torah and Other Ancient Texts” by Rabbi Levi Brackman and Sam Jaffe (Amacom Books, released September 2008, $24).  

Authors Brackman and Jaffe use both scriptural references and contemporary business examples to illustrate the powerful relationship between ancient jewishwisdom.jpg  modern success, and offer practical insights any business professional can use to:

– Replace ego with positivity;

– Become a master negotiator;

– Overcome procrastination and learn from failure.

Carla Hinton

Religion Editor


Oct. 5 Faith Bookshelf

I’m calling this posting “Faith Bookshelf” and it is the first in a regular Sunday blog series. I get numerous books from publishers all over the country and this is a way to highlight some of them.

Sometimes I might share a few lines about recently released books or perhaps offer a short list of those books focusing on a particular theme.

Today’s books center around the theme of Judaism, appropriate since the Jewish faith community is celebrating the High Holy Days:hopenotfear.jpg

“Hope, Not Fear: A Path to Jewish Renaissance”by Edgar M. Bronfman and Beth Zasloff (St. Martin’s Press, released Sept. 16, $24.95).

This book is a passionate plea to the Jewish community, urging members to celebrate the joy in their culture and religion. Further, it urges Jews to recognize their responsibility to help heal a broken world.

whobyfire.jpg“Who by Fire,”by Diana Spechler (Harper Perennial, released Sept. 23, $14.95).

“Who by Fire” is an emotional portrayal of a family struggle to find the role of faith in their lives. The product of four years of writing and research, the book perfectly captures the conundrums of religious fundamentalism in modern life and introduces Diana Spechler as an enormously gifted writer.

“Checkpoints” by Marilyn Levy (Jewish Publication Society, released Sept. 12, $14).

This is a young adult novel that brings to life the realities faced by teenagers in thecheckpoints.jpg Middle East today, as politics and prejudice threaten to tear lives and relationships apart. The friendship between two girls, one Israeli and one Palestinian, is put to the test when a tragic incident befalls the Israeli girl and her family.

Carla Hinton

Religion Editor