2 Thumbs Up for 10 Commandments

Last weekend I took Linnea (almost 5) to see The Ten Commandments, an animated movie about the life of Moses.  I tend to be pretty picky about what our family watches in terms of movies and TV because there’s so little value in most of it, but seeing this movie was the pleasant experience I hoped it would be.

The film started at the beginning of Moses’ life, when his mother put him in the basket and sent him down the river to keep him safe from the bad king. It continued with most of the highlights of Moses’ life, and then ended with him seeing the Promised Land from a distance as he passed the baton to Joshua.

Linnea really enjoyed watching the movie, especially since she’s heard so much about Moses’ life through stories in her children’s Bibles and knows most of the 10 Commandments herself. A few parts were unexpectedly frightening, like when Moses’ staff turns into a snake and eats up some other snakes in front of Pharoh. Having a general idea of what was going to happen next helped me talk her through those unsettling parts.

I can see us buying this when it comes out on DVD. Also, the company that produced this film is set to produce 11 more Biblical movies, and my hope is the next one will be about Joshua.

A side note: I had a post earlier about frustrations with Disney because of how Radio Disney cut “chosen by God” from radio ads about The Ten Commandments. The Christian Filmmakers Academy recently took an intensive theological and practical look at Disney’s 100 years of influence as a media giant. Read more about that here:

http://www.onenewsnow.com/2007/11/filmmaker_on_walt_disney_creat.php

The Not-So-Wonderful World of Disney

I don’t listen to Radio Disney, but earlier this week I read about that organization refusing to air an advertisement for the new animated movie about the Ten Commandments (being released Friday) because it said Moses was “chosen by God.”

How many times has Radio Disney aired God’s name being said in vain?

This incident doesn’t really surprise me, but it sure makes me question whether I should spend another penny on Disney merchandise.

You can read the Liberty Council’s press release about this at

http://www.lc.org/index.cfm?PID=14102&AlertID=748.

And you can sign a “Don’t Ban God from Ads” petition at

http://www.lc.org/index.cfm?PID=14102&AlertID=750.

As a side note, I’m planning to go see the movie. Plugged In Online has a review of it at

http://www.pluggedinonline.com/movies/movies/a0003462.cfm.

My Treasure

In the mail yesterday we received no less than eight catalogs, offering everything from windoware to goosedown jackets to personalized snowman figurines. Evidently October is when this world thinks we ought to begin Christmas shopping.

This world certainly offers us plenty of “treasures” that moths and rust destroy. Matthew 6:21 says that where your treasure is, there your heart will be also. Becausing I am working on being a better steward of all that God has entrusted to me, I threw those catalogs in the trash. Nothing in them is going to matter in 10 years, muchless a thousand years, so why waste my time and money on them?

In a thousand years, teaching my daughters about Jesus will matter. In a thousand years, time spent pointing others to Jesus will matter. Those are the treasures I must store up for myself — not the latest fashions or dust collectors.

Let This Be Written

“Let this be written for a future generation, that a people not yet created may praise the LORD…” -Psalm 102:18

For as long as I can remember, I have loved to write. But I’ve never been one to keep a journal very well. I guess I always feared my big brother would find it and tease me! God recently led me to Psalm 102:18. This verse inspired me to start this blog as a way to glorify God. By sharing my experiences with Him, how He is faithful to my family and how He answers my prayers, I pray that these words will point others to God Almighty. This is His story, not mine.