Despite all of the weak points of the episode, one (and maybe just one) scene rang loudly and true. Sue’s visit with her sister provided her sister and opportunity to say something profound about God. Just because things don’t go our way doesn’t mean God doesn’t care. Sue’s sister is more at peace with the world than Sue will probably ever be; her disability is not something holding her back, and she loves God despite it.
Radical Dreamer (post: 1429485) wrote:Also, I've heard they're introducing a Christian character who hates gays this season, so...that'll go over well. XD
ShiroiHikari (post: 1429489) wrote:Ummmmm, okaaaay. I thought this was a show about singing or something like that. Not exactly the kind of show I'd expect to tackle serious issues such as this.
ShiroiHikari (post: 1429489) wrote:Ummmmm, okaaaay. I thought this was a show about singing or something like that. Not exactly the kind of show I'd expect to tackle serious issues such as this.
Radical Dreamer (post: 1429485) wrote: Also, I've heard they're introducing a Christian character who hates gays this season, so...that'll go over well. XD
ShiroiHikari (post: 1429498) wrote:Oh, I see. I've never seen it, only heard about it. I think I'll pass, honestly. We don't need more shows depicting negative Christian stereotypes, if you ask me.
ShiroiHikari (post: 1429498) wrote:Oh, I see. I've never seen it, only heard about it. I think I'll pass, honestly. We don't need more shows depicting negative Christian stereotypes, if you ask me.
mechana2015 (post: 1429499) wrote:I think the real unfortunate part is that they aren't stereotypes by a long shot.
I think the real problem here is running the risk of the stereotype becoming self-perpetuated. Stereotypes exist for a reason, yes, but repeated adherence to them in mass media only serves to reinforce them as the standard, including how the group being depicted sees themselves.mechana2015 (post: 1429499) wrote:I think the real unfortunate part is that they aren't stereotypes by a long shot.
Fish and Chips (post: 1429504) wrote:I think the real problem here is running the risk of the stereotype becoming self-perpetuated. Stereotypes exist for a reason, yes, but repeated adherence to them in mass media only serves to reinforce them as the standard, including how the group being depicted sees themselves.
mechana2015 (post: 1429506) wrote:There is self perpetuation, but it's not the perpetuation by mass media one would expect.
In a lot of cases the things that have been mentioned (hating gay people, treating people as if they're unimportant, offering prayer rather than real assistance, mistreating kids who have children out of wedlock) are perpetuated from the pulpit, or by leaders and teachers within the church as positive things to do. In most cases the people that believe this wouldn't take the portrayal as negative, but the reactions of dislike to the portrayal as the real negative part if they watched the show at all.
There's a whole sub-culture in the US that lives this 'stereotype' without any perception that it's negatively portrayed or with the thought in mind that any negative portrayal is just 'persecution' and that it, and any other challenge are evidence that they should continue to perpetuate such behavior.
This is true.mechana2015 (post: 1429506) wrote:There is self perpetuation, but it's not the perpetuation by mass media one would expect.
In a lot of cases the things that have been mentioned (hating gay people, treating people as if they're unimportant, offering prayer rather than real assistance, mistreating kids who have children out of wedlock) are perpetuated from the pulpit, or by leaders and teachers within the church as positive things to do. In most cases the people that believe this wouldn't take the portrayal as negative, but the reactions of dislike to the portrayal as the real negative part if they watched the show at all.
There's a whole sub-culture in the US that lives this 'stereotype' without any perception that it's negatively portrayed or with the thought in mind that any negative portrayal is just 'persecution' and that it, and any other challenge are evidence that they should continue to perpetuate such behavior.
Fish and Chips (post: 1429510) wrote:This is true.
However, it is because media attention almost exclusively recycles this portrayal, that it has become the predominant depiction of Christians in the media. Because of this, non-Christians are inclined to believe this behavior is indicative of all Christians, and Christians who do not carry these bad habits are inclined to be quiet and meek, keeping to themselves, leaving the only Christian influence the now uninterrupted stereotype who, as you mentioned briefly, sees their depiction as positive reinforcement.
TWWK wrote:Part of my beef is that not one of the glee club members were like you. Not one. Even Mercedes didn't understand what God was all about, and she did the most for Kurt.
TWWK (post: 1429520) wrote:Eighteen replies to my original one, and most of them saying that the church doesn't realistically deal with hurting people well (particularly those who don't believe in God). The irony is, of course, that each of you is the church, and each of you is full of compassion and understanding, seeing the hypocrisy in the church. All across the nation, young people are putting faith into action, understanding that the church in America has far too long been an institution that hasn't done Jesus' work.
TWWK (post: 1429520) wrote:
Part of my beef is that not one of the glee club members were like you. Not one. Even Mercedes didn't understand what God was all about, and she did the most for Kurt.
TWWK (post: 1429520) wrote:Part of my beef is that not one of the glee club members were like you. Not one. Even Mercedes didn't understand what God was all about, and she did the most for Kurt.
crazypackersfan (post: 1430287) wrote:Absolutely awful episode, but I have come to expect it from Glee. The episode was very anti-religion in general. The Finn storyline was "everything is happenstance, prayer doesn't work" disguised as a joke. The Kurt storyline was also very anti-religion. None of the characters ever actually admitted their religion, either.
Combine that with an incredibly predictable storyline, and you've got the worst episode in Glee history.
Radical Dreamer (post: 1430294) wrote:I would be more inclined to agree if the episode hadn't ended the way it did. Finn's storyline ended with a comment akin to, "I believe God speaks in mysterious ways, just not through sandwiches," and Kurt's storyline ended in a positive church experience (and his father woke from his coma). It wasn't "anti-religion" so much as it was "pro-spirituality," and it was a critique on a lot of different things (see my large earlier post). I don't agree with the "pro-vague spirituality" standpoint, but I would hesitate to call the episode "anti-religion," given the way it ended.
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