Hank’s
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(group member since Jun 27, 2012)
Hank’s
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from the Geekklesia group.
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I saw the first Star Wars movie at 11, in the theaters in its initial run. I am a preacher's kid. I have a BA in Radio/Television/Film production, but received my own calling (independent of my parents') while in college, and am now a full-time pastor and agency executive. I have not forgotten my geeky roots; I try to game when I can (time is the limiting factor), love SF/F/Superhero movies, and consider this a Renaissance/Golden Age of genre television. I have a small collection of Old Time Radio series and an even smaller collection of comics (where I am conversant, but not fluent), maintain the Geekklesia blog page as well as the Geekklesia FB and G+ pages. My dream is to get a Master's degree in Biblical studies/theology and how it informs/is informed by popular culture (especially genre fiction). I am always on the lookout for great quotations from TV/Film/Comic books, etc. that illustrate biblical truths, which makes up one facet of this ever deepening thing we call #GeekTheology.

What should we read?


Having said all of that, its interesting that you mention B5, as Cowan spends a great deal of time looking at that series in his book. I think its interesting that series with atheists/secular humanists as the main creative forces B5, Buffy/Firefly, Star Trek franchise) seem to have the most exciting things to say about religion.
At this point, I'm not sure if I was referring to SF or human religion when I wrote that. Although, the question does resonate with a quotation from Carl Sagan that Cowan included in his opening chapters that referred to how small the god of most human religions (including Christianity) seemed when compared with the infinities of space. So perhaps I was asking about the fairness of the statement against religion, i.e., do we present a limited version of God?

Is this fair? What do you think?

Sacred Space: The Quest for Transcendence in Science Fiction Film and Television