Left Behind, but maybe coming out ahead
I remember watching A Thief in the Night at a Pentecostal church in Portland, back in the early 1970s. Loosely based on Biblical ("end times") prophesies, the storyline reflects evangelical beliefs about the trials and tribulations that await non-believers who don't ascend to Heaven during the coming Rapture. War. Pestilence. Disease. Famine. Natural disasters, a New World Order, and the inevitable ascension to power of the Antichrist.
The film was groundbreaking, in that while it was produced by Christian filmmakers, it was aimed at a wider audience. Hence, the infusion of rock music and the liberal "borrowing" of special effects most frequently attributed to horror flicks. Evangelism, writ large by popular culture.
Image Credit: Retro_Daze.org
The church bulletin called it "family entertainment," but I recognized it immediately for what it was: a hellfire-and-brimstone sermon intended to bring movie-goers to their knees.
I'd seen milder versions of this act many times before, in revival tents and church meetings. Doubts burned hot in my belly, even as a small girl, primarily because I couldn't fathom a God so vengeful that he'd tear whole families apart, that he'd rip all of creation asunder. But when the movie ended and the lights went up–when I saw stark terror, etched into the tear-streaked faces of the innocent children sitting in the pews all around me–the glowing embers of disbelief finally erupted into flames.
And here we are again, 40-some years later, witnessing the same (and to my mind, shameful) use of fear-based marketing to scare into the fold all those who live at/beyond the margins of church doctrine.
Image Credit: LeftBehindMovie.com
Although I suspect Left Behind will rake in lots of money, the underlying message runs counter to everything I believe. Light, replaced by eternal darkness. Love, yanked away at a moment's notice. When fear is the teacher and these are the take-away lessons…if that's your thing, so be it. But you can go on ahead without me.