This site will look much better in a browser that supports web standards, but it is accessible to any browser or Internet device.
October 18, 2007 printer-friendly version
— Mark I. Pinsky
Imagine the Hollywood pitch meeting: Producers try to convince cable
television executives to green light a new series about a burned out Oklahoma
City homicide detective named Grace. She smokes, drinks, swears, looks
for love in all the wrong places, and is played by Holly Hunter. So far,
so good, the money guys say, but what's the gimmick? Well, there's this
cantankerous but folksy angel named Earl who tries – without much success
– to save her from herself (and hell). Hence the show's title, Saving
Grace. Hmm, an angel of redemption who sounds like a Southern Baptist,
having no luck convincing a lapsed Catholic to mend her ways.
Where do we communicate most effectively to young people about faith?
Certainly not in the sanctuary or the classroom. "More theology is
conveyed in, and probably retained from, one hour of popular television,
than from all the sermons that are delivered on any given weekend in America's
synagogues, churches and mosques," Phyllis Tickle writes in God
Talk in America.
After decades of avoiding religion for fear of alienating viewers and
sponsors, prime time television discovered an audience for faith-related
shows. That is, as long as the series were upbeat, inspirational, and
rarely (if ever) used the word "Jesus." Michael Landon's Highway
to Heaven begat Touched by an Angel and 7th Heaven;
all enjoyed ratings and commercial success. But for shows taking a more
complex look at faith – Nothing Sacred, The Book of Daniel
and Joan of Arcadia – the outlook has been bleak. So far, Saving
Grace has survived its first season on TNT (next season, writers
say, the title character will date a Jew), but students I spoke with recently
at Southern Nazarene University in Oklahoma City were barely aware of
it.
However, the real breakthrough in fostering grassroots discussion of religion
hasn't come in TV programs premised on religion, but in the growing number
of shows about people in whose lives faith plays a part. Increasingly
in dramas and comedies, the "Christian character" is becoming
as ubiquitous as the "gay character" (and, before that, the
Hispanic and African American character). The "Muslim character"
may not be far behind – a new CBS comedy, Aliens in America,
has at its center a Pakistani exchange student.
Viewers seem to accept light-hearted treatments of serious religious issues
in animated sitcoms even more readily than in live action shows. A chief
example is The Simpsons, now in its 19th season and just off
its first feature film (which earned over half a billion dollars in theaters
worldwide). This smart show features a family that is incidentally (rather
than centrally) praying, church-going, grace-saying and Bible-reading.
With sophistication and sympathy, The Simpsons has portrayed
mainline, evangelical and Pentecostal Protestantism; Catholicism; Judaism;
Hinduism; Buddhism; religious cults; and Western missionaries in the Third
World. Bible stories, the Ten Commandments' relevance, gay marriage, the
soul's nature, and the tension between science and religion have also
been front and center. Less obviously, dozens of other episodes include
jokes and images about faith's role in characters' lives, especially in
the evangelical next door neighbor, Ned Flanders.
Other animated shows have waltzed through the door that The Simpsons
shouldered open. Futurama, also from The Simpsons' creator Matt
Groening, had an award-winning episode focusing on God's nature and divine
intervention. King of the Hill has considered women ministers,
"extreme Christianity," and mega-churches. Even the cruel, harder-edged
Family Guy, which gleefully crosses the line into blasphemy and
sacrilege, says some serious things about issues like Catholic prejudice
toward Protestants.
No show has been more fearless than Comedy Central's South Park,
which regularly mines the territory between scatology and eschatology.
The show has tackled radioactive topics like clergy sex abuse, Scientology,
and portrayals of Islam by Western television. An episode dealing with
Mormonism was simultaneously satiric and respectful, without once mentioning
polygamy. South Park has produced devastating critiques of Mel
Gibson's The Passion of the Christ and Christian "reparative
therapy" programs for gays. Naughty, nasty and nihilistic, the show's
pint-sized potty-mouths have literally eviscerated Bill Donohue, the show's
tormenter from the Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights.
These shows matter because they reach millions of viewers weekly – where
they are. Lounging around living rooms or dorms, younger viewers tend
to drop their customary veils of skepticism as the small screen entertains
them. In an age of evaporating attention spans and the dumbing down of
serious discourse, at least someone is talking about religion.
Mark I. Pinsky, religion writer for the Orlando Sentinel, is
author of The Gospel According to The Simpsons: BIGGER and Possibly
Even BETTER! Edition (Westminster John Knox, 2007).
Sightings comes from the Martin Marty Center at the University of Chicago Divinity School.
Submissions policy
Sightings welcomes submissions of 500 to 750 words in length
that seek to illuminate and interpret the forces of faith in a pluralist
society. Previous columns give a good indication
of the topical range and tone for acceptable essays. The editor also encourages
new approaches to issues related to religion and public life.
Attribution
Columns may be quoted or republished in full, with attribution to the
author of the column, Sightings, and the Martin Marty Center
at the University of Chicago Divinity School.
Contact information
Please send all inquiries, comments, and submissions to Kristen Tobey,
managing editor of Sightings, at sightings-admin@listhost.uchicago.edu.
Subscribe, unsubscribe, or manage your subscription at the Sightings
subscription
page.
Home | A-Z
Index | Search | Directories
| Contact Us | The
Divinity School | UChicago
1025 E. 58th St., Chicago, IL 60637
tel: 773-702-7049 fax: 773-702-8223
