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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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Sensual Scenes in Fiction Pose Unique Temptations for Women
Stories With Bad Ideas Can Still Help Us Grow
Engaging Fictional Violence in Our Real Worlds
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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 God’s glory.
Find the newest fiction
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and
adults
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Topics: The Church
Reading Is Worship 12: Desiring God As Fantasy Fans
As we come to the end(?) of this series, I’m curious: How is your God-glorifying, worshipful, speculative-story “singing” voice? What fantastic fiction have you read, seen, or heard that moved you to worship the Author?
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E. Stephen Burnett
Redeeming Culture In Stories and Politics
The Church is not anti-culture or pro-culture, but a gracious proclaimer of the Biblical Story, and what in culture reflects God’s truth or does not. This applies to stories, speculative and otherwise. And this applies to politics, the governance of culture.
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E. Stephen Burnett
Interview With The Werewolf
Today we’re visiting Resurrection Church for an interview with one of its most unusual parishioners…
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Fred Warren
Speculative Politics 4: Rebuttal By Marc Schooley
In this series conclusion, Marc Schooley says Christians should be political “Hobbits,” and defends his views with Scripture and support from fiction.
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Marc Schooley
Speculative Politics 2: Perspectives From Marc Schooley
Author Marc Schooley explains why he believes the Church has over-entangled itself in politics. Yet he agrees much with his fellow Marcher Lord Press author Kerry Nietz’s perspective about how stories and authors touch on politics.
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Marc Schooley
Reading Is Worship 6: Curing Weirdness-Idolatry
How can we fight inclinations to idolize “being weird” for its own sake? We must see fantasy “weirdness” as normal in the Bible (and even in our culture), ask God to help us reach out to critics, and remember why we love fantastic stories.
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E. Stephen Burnett
Reading Is Worship 5: Identifying Weirdness-Idolatry
Brothers and sisters: loving speculative stories is not about you. Or us. Or the genre. Or, especially, Being Weird. That’s especially vital to recall after last weekend’s controversy over cosplay at the ACFW awards banquet.
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E. Stephen Burnett
Reading Is Worship 2: Experience-Worship
It’s easy to break into others’ idol factories. But for most readers, including myself, the worst potential idol in enjoying speculative stories may be experience. How is this self-defeating? What is the Biblical cure?
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E. Stephen Burnett
When The Rubber Hits The Road
Once again, due to the hectic-ness of life in the “real world,” I was unable to put a video together. Sorry. This is the last post I’ll be doing on amillennial eschatological theology. If you haven’t figured it out by […]
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John Otte
Temples, Old and New
No video this week, but I am talking about butterflies and time travel. Yes, they are related.
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John Otte
Challenging The Indie Imagination
For this epic-story reader, it’s hard to keep track of all the new independent Christian-speculative publishers. Wouldn’t it better to combine some of them, at least for marketing? Several indie press-runners have already joined this conversation.
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E. Stephen Burnett
The Strange Case Of Nicheolas Bartleby
He loves speculative stories. But deep down he doesn’t much care for actually sharing the joy in the best ways possible.
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E. Stephen Burnett
Sex In The Story 7: Patri-Archetypes
Why do you believe speculative stories, in particular, are so apt to explore issues of fathers and children? Which father-oriented stories have you enjoyed and why? Which ones haven’t done so well?
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E. Stephen Burnett
‘A Wrinkle In …’ Truth?
Despite its classic status, Madeleine L’Engle’s “A Wrinkle in Time” is kind of boring me. But are the author’s apparently universalist beliefs even more concerning?
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E. Stephen Burnett
Speculative Antichrist
There’s a website called “The Top 100 Things I’d Do If I Ever Became an Evil Overlord.” In that spirit do I compose my list of things the Antichrist should avoid or implement.
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Kaci Hill
Speculative Faith Reading Group 2: Meeting Mr. Tumnus
Week 2 of the “Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe” reading group. Goat-men, tree spirits, naked Greek gods, a drunk on a donkey, and an evil White Witch — how are these things in a classic story Christians love?
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E. Stephen Burnett
Define ‘Christian Speculative Story’
What is this thing called Christian speculative fiction? Readers and writers are still debating that question. How do you define it? Care to defend your definition?
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E. Stephen Burnett
Beauty and Truth 4: The Chief End Of Story
I love story, yet recognize that Christians may give poor justifications for fiction. They may be good, but they’re second to the chief end of story: “Story’s chief end is to glorify God and help us enjoy Him forever.”
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E. Stephen Burnett
Film Failures, Countering Cultures, and Story’s Power
Reflections on The Gospel Coalition’s recent series about Christian movies. Do we draw arbitrary, legalistic boundaries against story “preachiness”? Do we fear the evil “Christian” label just as others have feared the evil culture?
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E. Stephen Burnett
Beauty and Truth 3: The Chief End Of Man
Story critics charge that Christians should do “more important things” than enjoy fiction. But a famous Biblical truth reflected in the Westminster Shorter Catechism begins to challenge that notion.
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E. Stephen Burnett
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