The Phoenix Network:
 
 
About  |  Advertise
 
Big Fat Whale  |  Failure  |  Hoopleville  |  Lifestyle Features

Comics for Christ

Evangelicals are speaking in bubbles — and fighting God’s war on pop culture
By DEIRDRE FULTON  |  October 10, 2007

071012_manga_main
Panel from The Manga Bible

Young Laurel Templeton spends her summer vacation “kidnapped by five cyborg flies and shrunk down to insect size so [she can] travel back in time with them to save the world from an evil spider.” You know, typical stuff.

A manga comic character and the star of the new TimeFlyz series, Laurel may be just an average girl, but she has a centuries-old, ancient-Hebrew-speaking friend with whom she can’t communicate, and a Nobel Prize–winning father who has been kidnapped by a deranged arachnid named Darchon. By the end of Pyramid Peril, the first installment of her story, she’s vowed to assist the cyborg flies in defeating Darchon and rescuing her father.

“They say, ‘From those to whom much is given, much is expected,’ ” Laurel realizes toward the end of TimeFlyz, Volume One. Although she thinks it’s a line from one of her little brother’s poems, that axiom is actually from the Bible — Luke, 12:48.

Yup, Bible verses are now being tossed around nonchalantly in a comic book. Laurel’s character is the most recent attempt by Zondervan — the Christian division of HarperCollins, which, with sales topping $1 billion this past year, is one of the biggest publishing houses in the world — to get . . . er, hip to what today’s kids are digging.

As opposed to other series in Zondervan’s new Z Graphic Novel line, introduced in August, there’s nothing explicitly religious about TimeFlyz; it’s just good, clean, moral fun — material that Christian bookstores can feel comfortable putting on their shelves, and that Christian parents can feel satisfied purchasing.

And yet the TimeFlyz series is being drawn in the popular Japanese manga style, a style that even a Zondervan-issued FAQ describes as one that “tend[s] to celebrate violence and sexual misbehavior.” That may seem a bit counterintuitive for a religious graphic novel, given the anti-pop-culture emphasis that pervades much of the Christian movement. After all, there’s not much about secular pop culture that can get by the Christian value-meter.

Take James Dobson, chairman of Focus on the Family, who says of the Harry Potter phenomenon: “We have spoken out strongly against all of the Harry Potter products.” The Focus on the Family Web site goes on to say that “Magical characters — witches, wizards, ghosts, goblins, werewolves, poltergeists, and so on — fill the Harry Potter stories, and given the trend toward witchcraft and New Age ideology in the larger culture, it’s difficult to ignore the effects such stories [albeit imaginary] might have on young, impressionable minds.”

Curiously, though, Zondervan has apparently deemed robotic flies that can travel through time to be cool — not devilish. So amid evangelicals railing in the mainstream media against Harry Potter and pop music as corrupting morality (remember, rock is the Devil’s music), Zondervan is quietly expanding on Christian efforts to adapt pop culture to evangelical ends. Like putting rock bands with drum kits next to the altar, or video screens above the pews, Christian graphic novels suggest a compromise approach: if you can’t beat ’em, join ’em — and do some proselytizing while you’re at it. In other words, a little fantasy is okay, as long as it’s morally stamped and approved.

1  |  2  |  3  |  4  |  5  |   next >
Related: Breaking the spell, Potter-schmotter!, The last Potter, More more >
  Topics: Lifestyle Features , Entertainment, Science and Technology, Focus on the Family Action Inc.,  More more >
| More
Add Comment
HTML Prohibited

 Friends' Activity   Popular   Most Viewed 
ARTICLES BY DEIRDRE FULTON
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   LOOK OUT FOR 'BATH SALTS'  |  July 27, 2011
    Watch out for "bath salts" — a new synthetic drug that's been on the Maine market for less than a year but has wreaked havoc in that time.
  •   PORTLAND’S MEDICAL-POT PROGNOSIS: KEEP PATIENTS WAITING  |  July 20, 2011
    The bloom is off the buds, that's for sure.
  •   PORTLAND'S NEIGHBORHOOD PROSECUTOR CLEANS UP THE CITY  |  July 13, 2011
    When Portland Police Chief James Craig announced at a June 28 press conference that he was leaving the city to become Cincinnati's chief, he took a moment to list what he considered to be the highlights of his two-year tenure.
  •   PINGREE ADVOCATES FOR RAPED VETERANS, GETS RESULTS  |  July 13, 2011
    The Department of Veterans' Affairs is taking steps to ensure that military sexual-assault and rape survivors have less of a hard time getting the benefits they deserve, according to US Representative Chellie Pingree, who represents Southern Maine in Washington, DC.
  •   A ROSE FOR CHARLIE, IN SONG  |  July 06, 2011
    On July 7, 1984, three teenagers threw 23-year-old Charlie Howard off of the State Street Bridge in Bangor.

 See all articles by: DEIRDRE FULTON

MOST POPULAR
RSS Feed of for the most popular articles
 Most Viewed   Most Emailed 



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2011 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group