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âOn Magic and Miraclesâ Trains Christians to Dispel Darkness and Discern Fantastic Stories
Christian skeptics of fantasy must reckon with the biblical wisdom spelled in Marian A. Jacobsâs nonfiction-about-fiction book.
— E. Stephen Burnett —
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âOn Magic and Miraclesâ Trains Christians to Dispel Darkness and Discern Fantastic Stories
Christian skeptics of fantasy must reckon with the biblical wisdom spelled in Marian A. Jacobsâs nonfiction-about-fiction book.
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Christian skeptics of fantasy must reckon with the biblical wisdom spelled in Marian A. Jacobsâs nonfiction-about-fiction book.
— E. Stephen Burnett —
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A Long and Glorious Tradition
If you think speculative stories are (or should) only be a “niche” market, I have a few names: Dante. Bunyan. Visionary fiction’s patron saints, Lewis and Tolkien. Oh, and Psalty the Singing Songbook. Also introducing: the SF Library!
— E. Stephen Burnett —
âHarry Potterâ and The Issues Beyond Fiction, Part 2
Three more reasons why “Harry Potter” issues go beyond questions of fiction witchcraft and wizardry: we might swing wild on our “discernment” views, or accept or shun things based on appearance alone, or have inconsistent expectations of stories.
— E. Stephen Burnett —
Please Stop Writing Fantasy Novels
Andrew Peterson: If I loathe most fantasy, why did I write The Wingfeather Saga?
— Andrew Peterson —
Escaping To Inspiration
I would have despaired unless I had believed that I would see the goodness of the Lord in the land of the living. Wait for the Lord. Be strong and let your heart take courage. Yes, wait for the Lord. […]
— Rebecca LuElla Miller —
Speculating About The Known
Last Friday, on my own blog I discussed truth in fiction. In part I looked at an article by Travis Prinzi at the Rabbit Room (where Andrew Peterson, Pete Peterson, Jonathan Rogers, and others interested in speculative fiction also hang […]
— Rebecca LuElla Miller —
Harry Potter, Bob The Tomato, and Genre
At one little Baptist church in 1997, no one had heard of Harry Potter. But “VeggieTales” was all the rage, and was proposed for the church’s VBS â until Vera (not quite her real name) spoke up. âI wonât have this at my church,â she said firmly. âItâs fantasy.â
— Zach Bartels —
Stories For Christians 1: The New âwatchful Dragonsâ
C.S. Lewis wrote about âwatchful dragonsâ on guard against religious trappings that seem incompatible with enjoyment. But many Christians today employ different Churchian Dragons, who tolerate fiction (if they do) mainly if it plays well on their own moralist pragmatic grounds.
— E. Stephen Burnett —
Randy Alcorn on Story, Courage, and The New Earth, Part 1
Author Randy Alcorn shares how he came to love God-honoring sci-fi and fantasy stories, how such stories point us toward eternity, and why some Christians still tend to avoid visionary novels.
— Randy Alcorn —
The Narnia Secret
If the title Planet Narnia makes you cringe, you’re not alone. And if the title The Narnia Code makes you think “Lewis would have hated this,” well, me too (although upon reflection, I realized it was Tolkien who would have […]
— E. Stephen Burnett —
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