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Try These Three Practical Questions to Discern Fictional Magic
How Do We Discern Good and Bad ‘Magic’?
Three Fantastical Christian Stories to Help Your Kids Head Back to School
The Death and Rebirth of Magic in Children's Fantasy
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Beware the Real Danger of Entertainment
Christian-Made Fantasy Can Shine Light in the Grimdark
How to Disciple Your Kids with Dangeous Books
How Reading Epic Fantasy Helps Me Be Brave
Engaging Fictional Violence in Our Real Worlds
Engaging That @&*% Our Stories Often Say
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Even If We Like Fantasy and Sci-Fi, We Can Still Practice Accidental Legalism
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Stories With Bad Ideas Can Still Help Us Grow
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Christians Can’t Consistently Blame Leftist Fiction While Pushing Our Own Propaganda
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Lorehaven helps fans of all ages explore fantastical stories for Godâs glory.
Find the newest fiction
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Topics: Controversies
Beauty and Truth 1: Four Sets Of Stories
Of the Christian novels you’ve read, which seem neither beautiful nor truthful, or only one or the other, or both?
·
E. Stephen Burnett
Fantasy And Overt Christianity
Should Christian writers refrain from having their characters do what Christians do — turn to Christ, pray for help, give spiritual counsel, worship with other believers, and so on? If Christians do want to show their characters acting like Christians, should their books then be confined to Christian circles? Should we indeed write for and market to Christians only?
·
Rebecca LuElla Miller
Rearranging Icons 2: Defining The Debates
What are icons? How have Christians viewed them in Church history, speculative stories, and evangelical art? If you think you or your denomination doesn’t deal with icons, in fiction or in faith practice, think again â and join our conversation.
·
E. Stephen Burnett
Is Fiction Killing Hope?
As part of our sin or as a result of our sinful hearts, we turn to idols to fill up the longings God alone can assuage. But what happens when we say, in true nihilistic fashion, there is nothing that satisfies or can satisfy. What happens when a society decides there is no hope?
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Rebecca LuElla Miller
Done To Death: Who Are We Trying To Reach?
Who is it that actually reads Christian fiction? I’ll give you a hint by re-asking the question: Who is it that actually reads CHRISTIAN fiction? I know, it’s a stumper.
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John Otte
Sex In The Story 6: Heroes and Heroines
Amidst belching sitcom dads, raging feminists, over-angsty teen-boy âchosen ones,â or inhuman âwarrior princesses,â we find God-glorifying men and women in many stories. Here are a few.
·
E. Stephen Burnett
Sex In The Story 5: More Male Mythologies
We may always have sex caricatures in stories, and they may balance each other out. But how do we cure stock males, gender-neutrals, bad boys, men-children, faith-based supermen, and Prophesied Heroes�
·
E. Stephen Burnett
Sex In The Story 3: Trans-Gender Issues
âThe Church is too feministic!â âThe Church is too chauvinistic!â Either extreme will affect our real-life thinking, and will infect Christian storiesâ characters, replacing them with caricature-icons.
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E. Stephen Burnett
Sex In The Story 1: Shooting Up Heroine
Action heroine Black Widow is annoying some fans of the forthcoming âAvengersâ film. How come? Is a storyâs female character only strong if she is fighting men or bad guys?
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E. Stephen Burnett
Magic Realism, Part 4
A writer cannot achieve his purpose. The reader must. So the purpose must be well communicated, then endorsed by readers. So why put a seeming out-of-place event in a story, or even base a story around one?
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C.L. Dyck
Secrets Of The Pyramid Scheme
Do most Christian speculative readers enjoy those stories because of their intrinsic value? Or do the majority of readers enjoy such reading mainly because of their own hopes to climb the pyramid and write their own novels?
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E. Stephen Burnett
Lord Of The Fantasies: Beyond The Swordfights
In âThe Lord of the Ringsâ films, elf-maiden Arwen almost joined the fight at Helmâs Deep, and King Aragorn almost dueled the dark lord Sauron. But the movie-makers chose otherwise. How come, and how does this show truly rare heroism?
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E. Stephen Burnett
Reviewing In The SF Library
Anyone can submit a novel, likely with a review, using the Speculative Faith Library’s Submit a Novel feature. What other changes could aid the Library? How may grace-and-truth-minded reviewers best evaluate a work of fiction?
·
E. Stephen Burnett
Beer Goggles
Reality hasnât changed, of course, but your perceptions have. You may be in for a rude surprise when the goggles come off.
·
Fred Warren
The Inklings, Part 3 – J. K. Rowling, An Honorary Member?
As early as 2000 John Granger, author of several books about Harry Potter, floated the idea that the creator of the series, J. K. Rowling, was at least an Inklings wanna-be. In part he debunks the idea that Rowling’s rise […]
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Rebecca LuElla Miller
Lord Of The Fantasies: The Nature Of Men
Changes made from book-Faramir to film-Faramir, from âThe Lord of the Rings,â reflect two approaches of showing human nature. Stories should reflect both: our bent toward sin and corruption, and our capacity to do good and act with nobility.
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E. Stephen Burnett
The “Alien Work” Of God Part VI
Like I said two week ago, I’m not one to back down from a bad idea. And I have a feeling that this might be a bad idea. We’ll see. Of course, that’s only if this post makes it past […]
·
John Otte
Lord Of The Fantasies: Beholding Middle-earth
Because I first read âThe Fellowship of the Ringâ only days before seeing the film version, I did not have time to form interpretations of characters, or expectations. Thus, the film blew me away, no disappointments. But how might I have been disadvantaged?
·
E. Stephen Burnett
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