
I should have known that my perception was all wrong - at least according to the Half Blood Sibling. Yes, he's conservative and mocks my environmentalism, but surely this little flick wasn't a threat to his world. Yet it's banned in his house for the unforgivable sin of portraying humans as flawed and elevating the act of restoring and protecting nature. Whatever.
I was curious to know what others thought, so I checked out a review on Christianity Today. Josh Hurst's analysis reassured me that I wasn't going to burn in hell for liking the film (although all the other bad things I've done may well qualify me). Hurst writes: "And it is absolutely not a political movie, no matter how hard a small faction of political bloggers might try to pin it as one. Yes, it has a message about the environment—take care of it. And yes, it has a message about capitalism—too much of it can be sinful. These aren't political points; they're very basic moral ones, and no rational Christian has any grounds on which to object to them."
Yeah, what he said.








