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Sunday, November 11, 2007
6:42 PM
The Golden Compass and His Dark Materials

And I was looking forward to watching this...Well just want to let u guys out there know abt this as we should becareful what we feed our minds with.

The Golden Compass
and His Dark Materials
New Line Cinema insists that it is toning down some of the anti-church messages contained in its movie adaptation of The Golden Compass. But there is still a great deal of reason for concern that these themes will be impossible to eliminate completely. Even if they were, the theatrical celebration of Bill Pullman's His Dark Materials stories will likely introduce many more viewers to a worldview that's wholly opposed to the gospel message of Jesus Christ.
Pullman, who has said, "I hate the Narnia books ... with a deep and bitter passion," has crafted a trilogy wherein the protagonists confront a wicked and malevolent church and seek to take on and kill a God figure, who's known as the "Authority." Those arrayed against the Authority are the story's heroes — including a 12-year-old girl and boy — and they regularly reflect Pullman's own antagonistic attitude toward Christianity. "If there is a God," he says, "and he is as the Christians describe him, then he deserves to be put down and rebelled against." That message is delivered unmistakably by an ex-nun in the story when she talks about why she renounced her faith in the third book, The Amber Spyglass: "The Christian religion is a very powerful and convincing mistake, that's all."
Another character says, "There may have been a creator, or there may not: We don't know." In addition to alternately denying that God can be known and insisting that He should be rebelled against, this fantasy series that targets children also exalts themes of witchcraft, divination, evolution, homosexuality and premarital sex.
(Adam R. Holz is an associate editor of Plugged In, a Focus on the Family magazine.)