Archives For pop culture

How Fringe Should End

Chris —  March 24, 2011

I’m holding out against hope that this season of Fringe won’t be the last.  When the show started, it seemed to be little more than an X-Files rehash.  But over two and a half seasons, it’s developed into a transdimensional drama, packed with characters fans have grown to care about.

The premise is that there are two worlds, almost identical, on the verge of destruction.  The characters seem to think that only one can survive, and that they are in a war to do just that.

Yet there have been hints that something deeper is going on.  Each side seems incomplete.  In one world, the main character, Olivia, has a mom.  In the other, her mom is dead, but she has a sister and an aunt.  In one world, the an FBI agent is a widower, in the other, he sacrificed his life for his mission, leaving a widow.  A recent poignant episode told the story of an old woman who could see her dead husband’s doppleganger in the other world.

Some people believe that the gospel of Jesus is just that you go to heaven when you die.  But perhaps it’s not so cut and dry.  Passages in Romans speak of Earth as a mother in labor pains.  The book of Revelation describes the coming of a new heaven and a new earth.

Perhaps Fringe will end, not in war, but in an amalgation of the two sides.   Each side is full of puzzle pieces.  The coming destruction is not a destruction at all, but the two broken sides becoming one cohesive whole.

There’s a lot of story left in Fringe, and I hope that it will get enough airtime to finish.  Perhaps it will end on a note of hope, with broken worlds and relationships healed.  This is also what we work for in the kingdom of God, a new heaven and new earth that represent the fullest potential of the old.

Eat Your Grilled Cheesus

Chris —  October 15, 2010

Recently Glee head-on tackled the subject of religion, saying nothing new, but typifying the place of faith in our pop driven society. It’s a step up from how they’ve previously addressed the subject, mainly jabs at abstinence programs and Glenn Beck.  From the title we knew it was going be cheesy, but there are a few things worth noting.

First, the idea of the defining characteristic of churches is that they are anti-gay is so deeply embedded in the pop-consciousness, it’s a given. The action in the episode is driven by a main character’s active choice to disbelieve in God because of the pain and persecution he has experienced in his life.  The whole episode seems to be screaming, “we need to know how to deal with the pain in our lives, and the religion you’ve fed us isn’t doing the job.”

The episode struggles with prayer and the sovereignty of God.  One character, assuming Jesus acts in the world like genie asks for three wishes.  When he gets them, and they don’t work out well, he questions his faith.  In the end, he decides to choose no faith over a God who fails to answer his every whim.  When the inevitable REM song hits, one wonders how many of the young people in the church are walking away from a similar misconception of God.

Most interestingly, the episode ends with a demonstration of how the act of worship can be evangelistic.  Seeing others truly pray and sing to God doesn’t lead to an immediate conversion, but it does allow him to begin to find hope.

And if the church can’t offer hope, what are we doing here?