Tag Archive for: disney gospels

Plus, God’s mission to share it as observed through Moana

 

“If the voice starts to whisper to follow the farthest star, that voice inside is who you are.” – Moana’s Grandma

 

What’s your calling from God?

Ever looked down the path in the direction to which God is nudging you onward, and you can almost hear an imaginary forecaster in your head say, “more dense fog today”? My hand is raised. The road ahead can be hazy. The white mist has descended, settled in for the long haul and it’s clouded up the entire scene before me.

 

Even when the fog lifts and I see more clearly God’s exact plan for how He wants to use me, I lack understanding of how Read more

Why? Because she’s just like you and me

 

Ok, so my anger doesn’t literally crystallize into an icy blast, and I can’t turn a fjord into a giant ice skating rink with the force of my finger, but this I know is true:

 

“For what I do is not the good I want to do; no, the evil I do not want to do—this I keep on doing.” –Romans 7:19 NIV

 

In Disney’s 2013 record-breaking release of Frozen, we find a unique main character in Queen Elsa. Despite the fact that she could arguably be considered either the protagonist or the antagonist, it didn’t take long for Queen Elsa to join the esteemed canon of Disney princesses, an elite category of characters whose popularity transcends the era in which they were created. Elsa brings pain and suffering to many of the characters in the movie. Yet, we find ourselves liking her and wanting things to work out for her. Perhaps we know her story all too well: the trying to be good.

 

In her rebel anthem “Let It Go,” Elsa bellows out the “storm” that rages on inside her. It’s a storm that reminds me of the good and evil at war in us, the unanimated version of humanity. Oh, how I want Keep Reading

A FROZEN DEVOTIONAL FOR ADULT DISNEY LOVERS

 

“There is no fear in love. But perfect love drives out fear.” -1 John 4:18

 

On this earth, there is no perfect love. No matter how great our earthly relationships, whether family or friends that God has placed in our lives, we have not experienced a love that is without its insecurities. Life is uncertain. Some know this reality all too well. Death, divorce, abuse, personal struggles with insecurity, and other hardships can make relationships seem all too, well…broken. Frozen’s Elsa is one who knows this truth well. In her musical duet with Anna, “For the First Time in Forever (Reprise),” where the sisters duo back and forth with increasing intensity, Elsa finally cries out, “There’s so much fear!”

 

Because of her childhood memory of accidentally hurting her sister with her icy powers, and her parents’ subsequent plan to keep her hidden away in her bedroom, Elsa has little faith or trust in love or relationships. She feels that she alone is responsible for keeping her personal world safe, and that she will do—by remaining in isolation from all people.

 

The movie depicts Elsa’s condition as having a “frozen heart.” She has learned through her circumstances to bury her feelings and remain coldhearted to the people all around her. She won’t let anyone in. It’s a depressing situation for Elsa and those closest to her.

 

All of this, Elsa admits, is motivated by Keep Reading

 

On the first day of school this year, my son came home saying a boy on the bus told him there were two things he needed to do to be cool: 1) own a pair of Vans (a brand of shoes that were, mind you, brag-worthy in my day and have made a recent comeback) and 2) play a certain well-known video game. That’s it. That was this kid’s recipe for cool. Only problem was, Keep Reading

Princess Jasmine is Modern-Day Esther

 

One of Disney’s most noteworthy business objectives of this decade is modernizing their classics through live-action remakes. It makes perfect sense: Disney reeled out box office successes in record-breaking proportions every year from the time I went to kindergarten until the year I learned to drive. I’m the generation of The Little Mermaid, Beauty and the Beast, and The Lion King, and now I have kids of my own. Disney might have just found a way to replicate the level of excitement I had in meeting a Disney character for the first time and getting their autograph by reinventing my beloved childhood favorites in a way that my children and I will want to watch together. It’s nothing short of business genius to put a modern spin on these classics from Disney’s Renaissance Era [1]and reintroduce them in live-action sequence 30 years later.

 

The most obvious choice in a strategy to modernize, and one it seems Disney has prescribed to, is by inserting some girl power into the story line. Celebrating the strength of femininity helps bring the story up to present day, or in this case to some 2,500 years ago. Keep Reading

I’m not sure how to say this out loud, but the original The Lion King was never one of my favorites growing up. Too sad. In fact, it was the first movie in which I cried while watching. So, whenever I look back on the movie, it’s the Read more

 

IF THERE’S ONE LANGUAGE OUR KIDS KNOW, IT’S THE LANGUAGE OF PRINCESSES & PIRATES.

 

The writers, producers and artists of Disney have often been heralded the greatest storytellers of modern times, and rightly so: the Walt Disney Company is currently worth anywhere between $100-150 billion. Kids all over America (and some places around the world) are absorbed in Disney culture. It’s not hard to imagine a child wrapping up in her favorite blanket, the one with a few well-known princesses on it before listening to her favorite Disney-themed bedtime book. Or it wouldn’t be hard to picture a child’s playroom where more than one set of big black ears can be found. Young ones and their caregivers who have been to a Disney theme park consider it one of their most memorable vacations. Even for those who haven’t yet been, Disney is on their toothbrushes, their backpacks and even the snacks their parents bring home from the grocery store.

 

Every time a child sees their favorite Disney character, they are reminded of the storyline and adventure that character journeyed through. But what they don’t always realize (for young and old people alike) is why these stories speak so strongly to their hearts. The truth is, we were made for these stories. These are stories not just of fairytale, but of redemption.

 

In the last two decades specifically, Disney has progressed toward more complex characters and storylines. Take Queen Elsa from Frozen, for example. One could argue whether she is the protagonist or the antagonist of this story. Isn’t this the story of the human experience? She represents the struggle of divine proportions that is going on between our flesh and our spirit.

 

While the Bible acutely depicts this fallen nature of every human life, it also portrays the loving nature of our creator God, the journey of God’s people in all their victories and failures, and the unfolding of God’s big, redemptive plan through His Son Jesus Christ. Jesus of Nazareth comes in the most unexpected of ways, even though He was spoken of in the very beginning. It is the greatest story ever told. At the pinnacle of this greatest story ever told is the Gospel: the greatest love story to ever exist.

 

Using the Bible as our model, we find that the way Jesus taught His disciples most often was through parables. He used illustrations that the people He was talking to were already familiar with: stories about farmers and gardeners and keeping lamps burning. He paralleled His Father’s love with the great love of an earthly father to a prodigal son. The list goes on. God knew that the people were more likely to understand the concepts of God and the workings of God through their everyday context.

 

So, why not utilize the greatest icon in storytelling—Walt Disney’s team of animators and storytellers—to communicate these deep Biblical truths? These stories have been pointing toward the Gospel in powerful ways for decades: through tales of getting lost on the journey and found into a much grander plan than the character could have dreamt up in his or her own finite wit. In the last two decades, gospel-lending messages are increasingly portrayed through Disney’s colorful stories of struggle and mighty tales of redemption. Modern-day parables, if you will.

 

Finding Nemo, for example, is a beautifully animated tale about a school of fish riding a magic school bus (insert an enthusiastic stingray in place of the red-headed, eccentrically dressed nut). It’s a menagerie of God’s creation of aquatic life set off the coast of Oceana, and it’s a larger-than-life adventure of a clown fish in search of his lost son. But beneath the cuteness of the story is a tale of a kind of love so powerful and so true that its original source can only be traced back to our heavenly Father. Specifically, the story of Nemo and his father Marlin mirrors the experience of the prodigal son and his father’s unabashed love for him found in Luke 15.

 

“Filmmaking communicates deep truths, whether or not the events really took place”

-Nate Scoggins, actor

 

Cinema is one of the most influential and strategic tools we have to share the gospel in our culture. The ultimate goal of Disney Gospels is that extracting parables from Disney movies would serve as a useful training tool in helping people, big and small, learn to find the God-truths in everything they view and encounter throughout life. I am passionate about sharing this powerful lens through which the Gospel can be seen and experienced in a new way.

 

Think about this: Seeing the truth of God when the world around you is seemingly telling you a much different story is not an easy task. It can be difficult to rectify in our hearts the disparity between what we see and hear in the news or in our everyday life with what God says is true—a truth perhaps not yet fully realized. But having the scales removed from our eyes and seeing everything through the lens of God’s great story of love and grace is life-giving. You can subscribe HERE to go on this truth-seeking, sight-restoring and life-giving journey with me.