Episode Details
Back to Episodes81. Should Christians Use ‘Clean Fiction’ to Fight a Dirty World?
Description
You musn’t go outside. If the plague doesn’t get you, the toxic culture will. Let’s be serious: worldview sewage pours out from your TV screen, and new generations of parents (not just grumpy Christians!) are waking up to nasty notions about sex and self-worship in the kids’ stories. That’s dirty stuff infesting our world. Do we need “clean reads” to keep out the filthy fiction?
Concession stand
- We’ll not be legalistic against “clean fiction.”
- We’ll not be legalistic in favor of “clean fiction.”
- “Don’t be legalistic” is not our standard. “Glorify God” should be.
- People have deeply personal preferences, associating them with stories.
- Stories help heal people in different ways. That factors into our exploration.
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1. What we mean by saying “clean” fiction
- It usually means “does not include” XYZ (sex, violence, cussing, occult)
- “Clean” stories are often described as “wholesome” or “family friendly.”
- Their fans aren’t limited to older people and/or evangelical Christians.
2. How we benefit from reading “clean fiction”
- Clean fiction fans can sincerely desire to pursue holiness.
- These stories help reinforce morality for impressionable children.
- They can be especially healing in times of stress or suffering.
- Even secular readers enjoy simple, winsome, wholesome story-worlds.
- These stories reflect wholesome reality in a way “darker” stories cannot.
You will notice that we have got them completely fogged about the meaning of the word “real”. They tell each other, of some great spiritual experience, “All that really happened was that you heard some music in a lighted building”; here “Real” means the bare physical facts, separated from the other elements in the experience they actually had.
—The Screwtape Letters, C. S. Lewis
https://speculativefaith.lorehaven.com/screwtape-on-redefining-realism/
3. What we lose by reading only “clean fiction”
- They might reinforce the notion that sin (or morality) comes from stories.
- Or they connote the idea that only good feelings and safe spaces can heal us.
- They imply the gospel (or shallow versions) only works in pre-cleaned worlds.
- In excess, they can lead us away from God’s reality and prep for suffering.
Conclusion: let’s enjoy “clean fiction” for God’s glory, and in moderation.
- After all, too much of any comfort food leads to an imbalanced diet.
- No, we don’t want to be “wrecked”! Yet neither should we be coddled.
- No, Stories Should Not ‘Wreck You, The Reader’, Marian Jacobs
- Yes, Stories Should Help Heal You, The Reader, Marian Jacobs
- Saving Your Child From the Village, Rod Dreher at The American Conservative
- Why Amish Romance Novels Are So Popular
Com station
David Alan Mock wrote in reply to our response to him in episode 77:
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