Here is AIG's broadside this week. Note how they cheerfully assume
motivations on the part of others. "Many producers want you to adopt
their pagan worldview." Sure. And I have this bridge ...
Q: How has evolution become part of entertainment?
A: Evolution has become so ingrained in the culture—especially when it
comes to movies and television.
Evolutionary ideas, such as millions of years and the big bang, are no
stranger to Hollywood. These ideas are snuck into cartoons, comics, and
movies quite frequently. Perhaps evolutionists think, “Make it funny and
cute, and show it enough times, and maybe they’ll accept evolution as
fact.”
Hollywood doesn’t spend hundreds of millions of dollars just to entertain
you. Many producers want you to adopt their pagan worldview that says
there’s no God—and that man sets his own rules. And they know that a
belief in evolution and millions of years is a powerful way to get people
to doubt the Word of God.
Carl Kerby, one of AiG’s popular speakers, teaches young people how to
develop their biblical radar to spot lies about God’s creation. Whether
it’s Bugs Bunny, Gilligan’s Island, Spiderman, Batman, SpongeBob, or Star
Wars, evolutionary ideas are there. Sometimes it’s subtle, but still
effective in indoctrination.
Burgy
To unsubscribe, send a message to majordomo@calvin.edu with
"unsubscribe asa" (no quotes) as the body of the message.
Received on Mon Nov 13 12:02:35 2006
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.8 : Mon Nov 13 2006 - 12:02:35 EST