Tag Archives: Culture

For A Higher Power: From Hacksaw Ridge to Muhammad Ali

Muhammad Ali arrives at federal court in Houston for his trial on a charge of refusing to be inducted into the Army.
Muhammad Ali arrives at federal court in Houston for his trial on a charge of refusing to be inducted into the Army.

What does it take for someone to stand for what they believe in? What does it take for someone to sacrifice for what they believe in? What does it take for someone to literally sacrifice their liberty, their very life for their faith?  In the film, Hacksaw Ridge, Desmond Doss enlists in the army and is faced with these questions right from the get-go. Muhammad Ali is faced with these questions in the prime of his fighting career, and thousands of others have faced these questions for centuries.

When I think of the term ‘conscientious objector’, Vietnam and the young men who refused to join the conflict immediately crowd the imagination.  Images of long haired hippies, in tie-die tee-shirts, ‘turning on, tuning in, and dropping out’ [1] in the streets of San Francisco and New York City in the late ‘60s, holding peace signs an decrying the evils of the War, are synonymous with the term.

Hacksaw Ridge

The 2016 Academy Award Winning feature film, Hacksaw Ridge, portrays the life of a conscientious objector that could not be farther from that image. Desmond Doss was working at a shipyard in Newport News, Virginia, [2]. When the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbour in December of 1941 he was determined to serve in the military, yet would not compromise his faith as a Seventh-day Adventist.  This meant adhering to two commandments that would cause him great difficulty. He would not kill, and he would observe the Sabbath. Consequently he refused to carry a weapon, let alone fire one, and requested a pass to attend church on Saturday. Continue reading For A Higher Power: From Hacksaw Ridge to Muhammad Ali

To Heaven and Back II: Miracles from Heaven

The Beam family and filmmakers, 2016
Miracles from Heaven. The Beam family and filmmakers, 2016

 

The movie Miracles from Heaven is based on the true story of a young girl, Annabel Beam, who suffered for years with two digestive disorders.  One day while climbing with her sisters, she fell headfirst into the hollow trunk of a tree. While the events that ensued may raise the suspicions of the skeptic, they are just as likely to reaffirm the faith of many–particularly of the film’s intended audience–and perhaps speak to a few of those skeptics as well.  Continue reading To Heaven and Back II: Miracles from Heaven

Spiritual Foundations of Non-violent Resistance

Civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. sits in a cell at the Jefferson County Jail in Alabama.
Civil rights leader, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., sits in a cell at the Jefferson County Jail in Alabama.

After the killings of   two black men at the hands of white police officers in July, and the subsequent murders of several law enforcement officers, there has been much discussion about the social injustices many African Americans and others have experienced in the United States for decades, if not centuries.  Continue reading Spiritual Foundations of Non-violent Resistance

Ben-Hur et al

Actor Charlton Heston as Judah Ben-Hur
Ben-Hur, 1959

Movies based on Biblical stories and characters have been extremely successful in the past. However the 2016 motion picture treatment of Ben-Hur—a retelling of a best-selling novel, a long-running play, and one of the highest grossing movies in history—has met with poor box office receipts at its North American release this month. Why? In the 1950s, Biblical epics were among the most profitable movies released up to that time. And among these films are at least three in which Christianity is viewed through a positive lens. Has the appetite for ‘Jesus-friendly’ epics changed?  I’ll argue that the audience for Christian-based films today is fundamentally different from sixty years ago, and this difference may be an example of a growing divergence between the secular and the religious in today’s society, especially when compared to the middle of the twentieth century.

In this piece I’ll take a look at three films, extremely successful in the past, and sympathetic to the Christian faith. They are Ben-Hur, The Robe and Quo Vadis.

Ben-Hur (1959 and 2016)

Continue reading Ben-Hur et al

Sacred Songs: Stories behind ten of our most beloved hymns

The writers and stories behind ten of our most beloved and influential hymns.

The Voice - Season 9
Contestant sings hymns on way to winning The Voice 2015 season

 

All Creatures of Our God and King – St. Francis of Assisi
A Mighty Fortress Is Our God – Martin Luther
Doxology (Praise God from whom All Blessings Flow) — Thomas Ken
Christ the Lord is Risen Today — Charles Wesley
Amazing Grace – John Newton
Battle Hymn of the Republic – Julia Ward Howe
Blessed Assurance – Fanny Crosby
Jesus Loves Me — Anna B. Warner
Great Is Thy Faithfulness — Thomas O. Chisolm
Take My Hand, Precious Lord — Thomas Dorsey

From St. Francis of Assisi’s, ‘All Creatures of Our God and King’, to Thomas Dorsey’s ‘Take My Hand, Precious Lord’,   hymns written to the glory of God have encouraged, sustained and uplifted people of faith for hundreds of years. Here are the stories and writers behind ten of the most beloved and influential  hymns written for the glorification of Jesus Christ.

All Creatures of Our God and King
Words: St. Francis of Assisi, 1182-1226
English translation: Henry Draper, 1855-1933
Music:  From a German hymnal in 1623, the Geistliche Kirchengesang

All creatures of our God and King
Lift up your voice and with us sing,
Alleluia! Alleluia!
Thou burning sun with golden beam,
Thou silver moon with softer gleam!
O praise Him! O praise Him!
Alleluia! Alleluia! Alleluia!

All Creatures of Our God and King, St. Mary’s Episcopal Cathedral, Edinburgh See and hear it on YouTube.

St. Francis of Assisi was born Giovanni Bernardone into a wealthy family in 1282. After serving as a soldier and engaging in behaviors and indiscretions that ultimately proved unrewarding, he experienced a spiritual awakening, and dedicated his life to serve Jesus Christ. He renounced his father’s wealth, and proceeded to live out in the open, in nature, if you will, dressed in rags, working for, and sometimes even begging for food. [1]   A group of young men joined Francis. They traveled the countryside preaching the Gospel. St. Francis would go on to found the Franciscan Order of Friars. A female follower created the ‘Poor Clare’ order of nuns.

Continue reading Sacred Songs: Stories behind ten of our most beloved hymns

Bob Dylan and the Gospel Songs

"Gotta Serve Somebody: The Gospel Songs of Bob Dylan."
“Gotta Serve Somebody: The Gospel Songs of Bob Dylan.”

Amid a driving rain Air Force One touched down in Havana, Cuba on the afternoon of Sunday, March 20, 2016.  The President and the First Family descended the steps under a family of stiff black umbrellas, and TV reporters and pundits struggled to find a metaphor that fit the historic occasion. Finally one commentator, steel in the voice, proclaimed. ‘A Hard Rain’s a-Gonna Fall’—there you have it, a reference to Dylan’s song from 1963.  Continue reading Bob Dylan and the Gospel Songs

Music Video – I Believe

‘I Believe’ is a music video on YouTube, based on one of my songs, that looks at the struggles people have faced for as long as we have been on this earth. It also imagines the positive things that are possible if we can somehow, someday, get it right.

I Believe
I Believe

Please check it out on my YouTube channel.  YouTube-icon-full_color

 

Next month, ‘Romero’– an article on Oscar Romero, the Archbishop of El Salvador. Hero, martyr, a voice for the voiceless in a time of oppressive government rule.

Dr. Ben Carson — Part II

The Making of a Candidate

Overview

Since announcing his bid to be the Republican Party’s nominee for President of the United States, Dr. Ben Carson has been at or near the top of the polls.  Despite the success of his campaign thus far, he has actually said very little about his core values, why he’s running for president, in mainstream media interviews. One can only speculate as to why this is the case, but the media coverage that he has received thus far—concentrating on anecdotes that he has mentioned in his books, stories that have occurred over fifty years ago when he was a teenager–has probably played a role in the candidate’s ability to share his core values with a wide audience. In addition, some of his public statements, which some have called controversial, has overshadowed a candid discussion on why he wants to be president.

There is no shortage of information on his key values, however. The numerous books that he has either authored or co-authored provide a window into his beliefs about his country, where it has been, and where it’s going.

A lifelong physician, Dr. Carson has little experience on foreign policy issues, and some would argue that his executive experience—like running a large organization or creating jobs—is rather thin. He cites his experience as head of pediatric neurosurgery at Johns Hopkins, a board member of a number of large organizations—including Costco and the Kellogg Company, as well as the president and co-founder of the Carson Scholars Fund, [1].  His competitors by contrast have all won statewide office or have run large businesses.

Dr. Carson’s view, by any examination, would be considered conservative, but even so, as recently as April 2, 2014 he was a registered Independent, [2]. He has however voted Republican since 1984 [3].

He is unique among candidates due to his inspirational story of overcoming poverty and racism to become one of the most renowned brain surgeons in the world. That, as well as a very bold Christian faith, has made him one of the most popular presidential candidates, of either party. It’s no surprise then that his personal values are playing a huge role in his campaign thus far. An examination of his books, interviews and speeches reveal several values that are particularly prominent. And these are the issues I will touch on in this paper.

My take on his key issues are the following:

  • The Role of Government
  • Freedom and Liberty
  • Spending and the Debt
  • Health Care
  • Political Correctness
  • Social Values
  • Foreign policy, Defense and Illegal immigration

Continue reading Dr. Ben Carson — Part II

Dr. Ben Carson – Part I

The Making of a World Renowned Neurosurgeon

 

On February 7, 2013, at the National Prayer Breakfast at the Washington Hilton in the U.S. capital, Dr. Ben Carson stood a few feet from the President of the United States, gave the keynote speech, [1]   and stepped into the national spotlight. A little less than two years and three months later,  on  May 4, 2015, at Detroit’s Music Hall Center for the Performing Arts, Dr.  Carson announced his bid to become the Republican Party’s nominee for the President of the United States. [2].

Since his announcement, Dr. Carson, who has never held political office, has consistently ranked at or near the top in the myriad of political polls, second only to the outspoken billionaire real-estate tycoon, Donald Trump, and way ahead of experienced elected officials like former Florida governor, Jeb Bush, Senator Marco Rubio, and current Ohio governor, John Kasich. What has propelled this unlikely freshman candidate to the top of the polls in the race to become the next President of the United States? Nothing less than a real-life Horatio Alger story of a poor inner-city kid from Detroit and Boston who would one day become one of the most renowned brain surgeons in the world.

As Dr. Ben Carson campaigns to become the Republican nominee for President, his backstory has become increasingly well known. Much has been written and broadcasted about him since his ascendancy to the top of the polls. In this article—which will examine his medical career, and the subsequent article—which will examine his social views—I will attempt to examine the portrait of the man that has emerged from his own pen, from his speeches, and interviews that he has granted. I’m primarily interested in understanding Dr. Carson from his point of view, not from the perspective of a journalist or pundit who may or may not have a built-in bias, or a personal, professional or political agenda.

Abandoned

Continue reading Dr. Ben Carson – Part I

The Business of Violence

If it is possible, as far as it depends on you, live at peace with everyone. Do not take revenge, my dear friends, but leave room for God’s wrath, for it is written: “It is mine to avenge; I will repay,” says the Lord.  Romans 12:18,19 (NIV)

Background

We are inundated with images of violence from the time we are able to watch a television program, or play a video game. According to a 1999 report for the U.S Senate Committee on the Judiciary entitled, ‘Children, Violence, and the Media’, an American child will see 16,000 simulated murders and 200,000 acts of violence on television by their eighteenth birthday [1].

‘Action’ films as they are often called, and cop shows, with a steady drip of fisticuffs, gunplay and explosions into the culture’s bloodstream, have dominated Western—indeed world-wide entertainment–for years.  If repetition is a marker of success, then violence in entertainment is undoubtedly one of the most successful business models in history, comparable, probably, only to the sex industry.  But there is a significant difference between the two. While titillating images of scantily clad women abound on film, on television programs, commercials, and even news programs –the ‘real’ sex industry, pornography, is still taboo, primarily consumed in the privacy of one’s home.   ‘Action films’ –I’m using the term to describe films that not only contain lots of physical stunts or car chases, but significant beatings, gunplay and/ or high body counts–are distributed openly in movie theatres and in your neighbourhood department stores, as acceptable forms of entertainment anyone can consume.

Why?
Continue reading The Business of Violence