Channel 4 recently screened a documentary called
God's Next Army about
Patrick Henry College, an evangelical Christian college in America. You can
watch it over at Google Video. Why not download it using the Google Video Player thingy so you can still watch it when Channel 4 finds out?
Channel 4 also brought us
Richard Dawkins and the Root of all Evil (why not get
part 1 and
part 2?)
God's Next Army lacks the pugnacious presenter, preferring instead to give the
ropefloor to the college's staff and students. The college aims to produce people who will take part in some sort of Christian version of
The West Wing, where the staff of the White House will successfully battle to prevent gay marriage while engaging in snappy but incomprehensible dialogue. Luckily, it seems that
evil contains the seeds of its own undoing.
While I was reading
Rilstone on
Dr Who (I am firmly in the "
Fear Her was crap,
less soap and more science fiction, please" camp), I ran across Helen Louise, a
Christian wrestling with the idea of Hell. She'd linked to
The Gobbledygook Gospel, which pretty well describes the dissonance at the heart of the evangelical gospel (but which then goes on to argue that God is like a big friendly dog: it takes all sorts, I suppose).
I also found
The Shock of Your Life and downloaded the first chapter, which is about what non-Christians can expect when we die, told in the first person by a non-Christian who is about to be unpleasantly surprised. It's sort of really bad Christian fan-fiction. The author gets special extra bonus points for juxtaposing a partial quote of the
Parable of the Sheep and the Goats with an assertion from the narrator's angelic guide that it's not what you do that gets you into heaven; unfortunately the partial quote is one that leaves out the bit where Jesus says that it
is what you do that gets you into heaven. It's a good thing that
Revelation 22:19 strictly only applies to the Book of Revelation itself, I suppose. One cannot judge the canon (geddit?) by the fan fiction, but I find myself slightly worried that this sort of stuff is being marketed to teenagers. Why can't they read more wholesome stories about Snape having sex with Hermione instead?