By Bill Reichart –
September 8, 2008
Thou Shalt Laugh Christian comedians keep their comedy acts clean-Although Christians can do comedy, comedy about Christianity is problematic, making sure you don’t cross the line into what could be considered sacrilegious.
Related Articles
-
Why Vote When You Can Laugh? The Daily Show and Complacency
20 December 2007 5:27 PM |
9 Comments
That time is again upon us when car, make-up, and insurance commercials are momentarily sidelined to make way for content-less, image-shaping, political advertisements; when millions of bumpers across this great land will be drafted in an attempt to create the illusion that a candidate has wide-spread support.
-
Enjoying Culture without Being Consumed, Part 2
11 April 2008 11:40 AM |
1 Comment
Alan Noble concludes a two-part series on how we can keep from getting carried away by this whole Pop Culture thing.
-
You Gotta Have Faith
05 February 2008 4:21 PM |
4 Comments
He has a brain defect, but that's not really a bad thing. This particular brain defect allows New York City lawyer Eli Stone to have amazing visions that tell him how to help others. If the story sounds far-fetched that’s okay, because it is the latest plot for a new ABC comedy.
-
FAQs
02 April 2008 9:04 AM |
No Comments
Tweet Frequently Asked Questions On your site I found a review of a film, book, video game, or CD with explicit content (violence, profanity, nudity, sexuality, magical themes) Aren’t you condoning these sins and/or tempting others to sin by reviewing or praising this work? Ultimately...
About the Author
Bill Reichart is a husband, daddy of two daughters and a pastor at Big Creek Church (pca) in North Atlanta. Bill received his Masters of Divinity from Reformed Theological Seminary in Orlando. Before pastoring a church, he worked with college students in the northeast for over 16 years. He really enjoys movies, science fiction/fantasy writing (yes he’s been to a Star-Trek convention!), the Simpsons and theology books - not necessarily in that order. He has always been fascinated with the intersection of culture and his faith.