Sunday, August 3, 2014

50 Shades of Grey : Response

I'm a Christian and can avoid certain culturally mocked viewpoints with very little difficulty at all. After all, I wouldn't want to be labeled as a pompous idiot trying to enforce my ideas on the whole world. But there comes a point where 'culture' becomes so unhinged from rational, moral sanity, that something must be done. 50 Shades of Grey is a massively drooled over novel about a young, innocent, and apparently intellectual girl who becomes involved in a sexual and violent relationship with an older man. It is now being made into a major motion picture on Valentines Day, of course, when we celebrate sex and the most uncomfortably alluring desires of the flesh. Not. Valentines Day is a day to celebrate love, a feeling only higher beings can possess that has solely to do with sacrifice not obsession and self-gratification.

If you've found yourself to be one among many people who are engrossed in this book or merely have heard of it and feel unsure of how to respond, I'd ask you to take time to dwell on some of these questions.

  • Does anything in you feel like you're doing something wrong when you read this book or watch this movie? If so, don't avoid it -- let it fester.
  • Do you want to be treated like an individual with a thinking, respectable mind and character? If so, don't watch this film. You're advocating the development of a certain way of thinking.
  • Would you want your daughter to be? Mother? Sister? Cousin? Friend?
  • Do you think that sexual abuse is okay? There may be consent in certain abuse situations (although that's another topic and could be debated as brainwashing) but even the participating in a movie like this encourages the exploitation of human beings. Don't forget that human trafficking is real globally and in the States.
  • Do you think that eating disorders are okay? Many of these come from struggling with body image which relates directly (even if subconsciously) to the media. A film or book like 50 Shades of Grey tells women that their worth is in their sex appeal -- their body -- their image. 
  • Do you think you are not mentally affected by watching excessive promiscuity? 
  • Even if this film is not damaging, how is it a positive use of preciously God-given time?
  • How would you feel watching this film with Jesus?
  • How else but in practical ways are the servants of Christ to separate themselves from culture?
  • Do you take Scripture at its word in your life or only when it feels good to follow?
  • Love is sacrifice: God shows his love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us (Romans 5:8).
  • Think on what is pure: Finally, brothers and sisters, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable—if anything is excellent or praiseworthy—think about such things (Philippians 4:8).
  • The role of men is to lead and provide for their families as opposed to taking from women physicallyBut if anyone does not provide for his relatives, and especially for members of his household, he has denied the faith and is worse than an unbeliever (1 Timothy 5:8).

Christ came to cleanse us from sin, to heal us from impurity, and to help us flee from lust. He has given us himself, his Spirit, and I beg you to hold tight to him for the limited span of your life and to pray for one another that we may be aware of our desperate need for Christ.