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  • Mark 12:16 am on June 14, 2008 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , consumerism, documentary, morgan sperlock   

    Movie Reviews – Jumper, What Would Jesus Buy? 

    Tonight Katrina and I watched Jumper and What Would Jesus Buy?

    Jumper is hardly worth mentioning.  Nice effects.  It had Anakin from the newer Star Wars movies.  I say again, it is hardly worth mentioning.

    What Would Jesus Buy? Presented by Morgan Sperlock, (of Supersize Me fame), was a provocative and prophetic documentary that was released last Christmas.  It featured Reverend Billy and the Holy Church of Stop Shopping Gospel Choir.  At first I thought this whole thing was a big hoax for the documentary, but as I watched it, I realized that these people were just protesters who had left their picket signs in Washington and had hit the road to get the message out.  They drove two bio-diesel buses and dressed up in full Pentecostal flare.  They “preached” in churches, diners, even the Mall of America.  I don’t know how they had the guts to do everything they did, going into retail stores with megaphones warning consumers of a “Shopocaplypse,” and singing hymns denouncing capitalism as god,  but they did it.  Police were regulars on the tour, and “church members” regularly found themselves behind bars.

    I found myself laughing in disbelief.  I had heard of Not Buying It, a great book about a lady who went a year without shopping, and Buy Nothing Day, a grassroots movement encouraging people to take a day off shopping and find meaning with family and friends rather than in consumption.  When I heard that the retail space in the United States could hold every North American, South American and European inside its doors all at once, and when I heard that every American (regardless of age/race/gender) holds an average of $13,000 in credit card debt, and 4.2 billion credit cards are mailed out to Americans EVERY YEAR – I realized the kind of power we’re up against.  My laughing wasn’t so much in disbelief as much as relief.

    It is good to see someone finally take seriously the phrase “Jesus is the reason for the season,” and to do it with a little humor and performance.  Most street preachers with a megaphone rain down condemnation on passers by (I know, I’ve been pelted by some of it myself), but these guys went caroling with parodies of Christmas tunes!  I will listen to anyone who has a good joke and doesn’t take themselves too seriously.

    While watching What Would Jesus Buy? I leaned over and said to Katrina, “Our kids are gonna be so weird.”  When I look at the state of the world today, and the direction its heading in – maybe ‘normal’ is what’s weird, and we’re just searching for sanity.  I’m not some crazy anarchist – I just think we’ve gone way overboard.  It’s high time someone called it for what it is.  God likes to use humor sometimes to do just that.

    BTW – Amidst drunken credit card tomfoolery across the nation, Katrina and I have been receiving lots of financial peace from this guy.

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    • Curtis 8:53 am on June 15, 2008 Permalink

      Ha ha! That’s awesome! What a blast, we’ll check that out.

      What do you think about these new refillable debit cards? I had a mixed reaction — on the one hand it provides some help to low-wage workers (and refugees) who don’t have bank accounts, but still need to swipe plastic for some things.

      On the other hand though it trains people to love the plastic and swipe it often, so God help them if they ever get a real credit card!

    • Mark 9:06 am on June 15, 2008 Permalink

      I think regular debit cards are fine. They represent your actual cash flow. My wife and I use an envelope system for the things we usually go over on (like dining out, or entertainment) and use our debit card for more steady things (like cleaning supplies, or gas…although there’s not much steady about that these days).

      It sounds like these refillable cards are like gift cards, which make me feel like I can buy anything. I would personally stay away from them, but then again, I have a bank account.

      What places don’t accept cash? In fact, I feel like I can negotiate better with dollar bills waving all over the store than I can with a fixed price and a plastic card. I’m fine with the refillable debit cards for those without a bank account – in my opinion, the more important thing is – do I have a budget that names every dollar that comes in and goes out? Then it doesn’t matter what form its in (cash, plastic, check) its under control.

    • Curtis 9:13 am on June 15, 2008 Permalink

      Eh, many hotels, car rentals, online purchases, etc.

      Right, there’s no need for such a thing if you have a bank account. We use a regular debit card as well. That envelope system sounds interesting…

    • EC 1:55 pm on June 16, 2008 Permalink

      Chyeah we will play ultimate in Chicago! My parents are helping us move up there. I could see them breaking out some awesome fritbee skills.

      Glad to know I shouldn’t waste my money/time on Jumper.

  • Mark 2:22 pm on March 11, 2007 Permalink | Reply  

    A Review of the Film “The Second Chance” 

    cdsmall-7189.jpgTrina and I were looking for a good movie the other night and picked out The Second Chance.  It was a gamble for us because we’d never heard of it before, and when we saw that Michael W. Smith was one of the stars of the show, we figured we had the flick pegged right then and there.  You see, I guess I’ve never been a MWS fan, not just because I’m not down with long drawn out praise and worship CDs, but because to me he’s always been the Nashville-white-boy-poster-child of suburban Christianity; something that I’ve grown up in but recently have been trying to move away from.   But with the lingering facination I still have with the pop-Christian subculture, we went ahead and gave the movie a “second chance”.  *insert forced chuckle here*

    Ethan Jenkins (Michael W. Smith) is the associate pastor at The Rock, a massive megachurch in the suburbs of Nashville, TN.  He is also a Christian musician who is filthy rich off of his albums and his latest book release (sounding familiar?).  The Rock is financially tied to Second Chance Ministries, an urban church on the other side of the tracks that is on the verge of financial ruin.  For decades white folks have been descending on this ministry to “sling potatoes” pass out bibles, and support it financially, but when Jake Sanders (Jeff Obafemi Carr) the pastor of Second Chance finally lets The Rock know that their money and superficial help is no longer wanted, The Rock forces Ethan to watch and observe Jake and the ministry Second Chance in order to keep a closer eye on the ministry.

    Ethan and Jake are forced into proximity, but have no respect for the other or their respective ministries.  As the relationship between The Rock and Second Chance begins to dissolve, Ethan must make some hard choices about God, life, and what church is really all about.

    What makes this movie so surprising is its honesty.  Contrasts between the rich and the poor realities are made both verbally and non-verbally throughout the film.  The film portrays the complex life of the urban poor with ferocious tenacity and throws it in the face of its expected audience – us white suburbanites watching from the comfort of our own homes.  Also, the political “ugly side” of the mega church is shown for what it is on our screens and having seen it first hand I can say that they spared no gruesome detail.  Finally, strained race relations are believable and layered multifaceted.

    MWS fits perfectly in this role.   Ethan, a white guy with a clean shave and gelled hair, he drives onto the scene of Nashville’s underbelly with a BMW and a new leather jacket.  As his heart begins to be transformed, he begins to see signs (literally) of The Rock’s misunderstanding of what Jesus Christ and his Church is all about.

    This movie never outright preaches, but it was fully convicting.  The chasm between an event-based faith and the life-on-life of organic christianity has never more clearly been communicated.  The comfort-centered “evangelism” delivered by the whites clinched my own heart and helped me see where I still put myself above others.  It also shows the need for forgiveness and reconcilliation between worlds we know little or nothing about.

    My only complaint is the lack of a decent ending.  I won’t give it away, but I wish there had been some more closure on some of the relationships we had invested in throughout the flick, but I guess that too is honest – we should never expect a clean story when it comes to life.  It is always moving, shifting, and without proper closure.

    —-

    I’ve been talking with Agent B for the past few weeks, just sharing stories of life mostly, and as I watched this film, I kept thinking of his service with the Izzy Group Ministry.  How many professional Christian workers and their ministries to the poor are pushed around by the politics of the Sugar Daddy Church only to finally see their work die under the weight of the institution?

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    • EC 8:18 am on March 12, 2007 Permalink

      Haha! I’ll try to smuggle them into my luggage. Are you and Katrina going to be in town? I think a group of us are meeting for dinner on Tuesday night. I haven’t seen you two in ages! And you haven’t met the boy yet…

    • EC 8:24 am on March 12, 2007 Permalink

      Just read your post–I’ve seen that movie in the store and have wondered about it. I, unlike you, have been a MWS fan since I got my first cassette tape of his in middle school. I may have to rent this movie. (We rented Flushed Away this weekened–not really deep and moving but quite entertaining!)

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