As a liberal Christian, and not a militant one, I’m jovial enough to accept a little teasing and mockery, and I’m not like an ISIS Muslim who will declare a fatwa on somebody for depicting the Prophet Muhammad in a comic strip…
…But I immediately turned off Hercules at the very start of the movie when the Muses declared the story of Zeus as being “the gospel truth”. NO. There’s only one gospel truth in my mind, and that’s the Greatest Story Ever Told.
? Sorry for hijack, and I am not telling you what movies you should watch or what your movie-watching criteria should be, but it seems a bit… unusual to take the phrase “gospel truth” so literally in the sense of religious belief. In specifically Christian usage, of course, it carries the literal sense of “the truth of the Christian gospel”, but in colloquial usage it just means “attested, vouched for”.
The Muses “gospel choir” in Hercules is not actually trying to promote sincere adherence to ancient Hellenic pantheism. It’s just a modern storytelling riff on the Greek legend of the Muses as the praise singers of the gods.
I mean, IIRC you’re something of an Asimov fan. Do you boycott Asimov stories because the character Karl Frantor in his story “The Weapon Too Dreadful To Use” uses the phrase “gospel truth” in a similarly colloquial fashion to mean “definite fact”, with no implications about asserting or challenging the truth status of Christian gospel?
The Black singers sang about the Hellenistic view of the creation of the world in a distinctly African American style of gospel music, using the words “gospel truth”. That’s a little bit different from your Asimov example. To put it mildly. When someone uses the phrase “gospel truth” in the context of a gospel song, it should be used to describe the Christian Gospel. The story of Jesus. Yet people are more upset about Lightyear and Amazing Journey having LGBT characters than this. I don’t ever see Hercules mentioned among things conservatives are freaking out about. Or anybody else, really. But it chaps my ass, and I’m a liberal Christian.
I’d have been willing to watch Hercules if not for the blatant cultural misappropriation of the Christian Gospel. But people were more upset about White people wearing Maui costumes, to the point where they removed them from Walmart.
Well, it appears that your opinion on how it “should” be used is a minority view. But I’m sorry if it upset you.
Not a great example - the Maui costumes were literally a representation of a Polynesian’s skin. That’s beyond “cultural appropriation” and on its way to “blackface”.
Okay, but not really seeing why that should necessarily apply to a gospel-style song. As you note, the Muses’ songs in Hercules are not in any way Christian, they’re just using the musical styles of African-American gospel music.
Christian musicians, including African-American Christian musicians, have been using gospel-music styles for songs without Christian themes pretty much since gospel music began. I had thought that objections to gospel/secular stylistic crossover more or less went out with the soul-music career of Sam Cooke (who btw did a whole song explicitly addressed to that notorious pagan deity Cupid), but okay, you do you.
And again, apologies to all for this digression on a topic that is AFAICT neither Republican nor stupid. I’ll shut up about it now.
It would never occur to me to take “gospel truth” to refer to refer to the Gospel at all. I’ve only ever heard it as a phrase meaning the same thing as, say, “honest-to-God truth.” When referring to the actual Gospel, I’ve never heard anyone put “truth” after it.
Not to mention Judaism. The past, what, 1,600 or 1,700 years of Western culture have been about white Europeans appropriating what we call the “Old Testament”?
Hercules the movie was just okay, I thought but it has one of my favorite Disney songs in it, “I Won’t Say I’m in Love”. Also it’s very pretty and well animated. I’m glad I watched it and didn’t get hung up on what it did to the source material.
Disney’s Hercules is essentially about the relationship between a human being, raised by human parents, and his relationship with his Divine Father and the travails and ordeals he undergoes in order to better know his Father, who loves him. He is tempted by the malevolent devil figure and his imps. Nowhere in the movie is it stated that the Heavenly Father has any other children (though lots of them appear), and at the end of the movie it is revealed that Hercules will be able to join his Eternal Father in the clouds.
There’s some Greek mythology in there, too, around the edges, but there’s a very strong Christian message to the film.
IOKWANWPDI. (It’s okay when a non-White person does it.)
This is going to sound bad coming from a liberal Christian, but it seems sometimes that white Christians are one of the few Acceptable Targets left in society. You can’t wear a Maui costume if you’re white. You’ll have someone look at you askance, probably, if you sing “Mary’s Boy Child” if you’re white.
While shepherds watched their flocks by night,
Them see a bright new shining star,
Them hear a choir sing,
The music seemed to come from afar.
'Now Joseph and his wife Mary,
Come to Bethlehem that night,
Them find no place to born she child,
Not a single room was in sight.
Charlotte Church did in 2000 to brilliant effect, but in the post-Black Lives Matter era of our society, I’d be a little more tentative.
But it’s okay to talk about the Disneyified version of the Hellenic creation story while co-opting Christian gospel music, and it chaps my ass. Ray Charles, I can appreciate. The love between two people is holy, too. (“Hallelujah, I Love Her So”). There’s a subtle difference between what he does and what Disney did.
You know what? This is the Dope. Citation, please? Okay.
… Back when the world was new
The planet Earth was down on its luck
And everywhere gigantic brutes
Called Titans ran amok
… It was a nasty place
There was a mess
Whereever you stepped
Where chaos reigned and
Earthquakes and volcanoes never slept
… And then along came Zeus
He hurled his thunderbolt
He zapped
Locked those suckers in a vault
They’re trapped
And on his own stopped
Chaos in its tracks
And that’s the gospel truth
That’s not a low bar for Christian persecution. C’mon, man.