djenkins-90253
ago 2015 se unió
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Clasificación de djenkins-90253
This movie is objectively good, and I've rated thousands of movies so I would know. I doubt that it is scientifically or historically accurate, but these are not my areas and I wouldn't know anyways. Besides, this is fiction - so I don't believe it's supposed to be. What I do know is that it is an engaging movie that is funny and charming at times, and just the right length of time.
What concerns me about some of the other reviews here is that people are panning Kevin Sorbo and the movie for other reasons that do not seem rational or fair. Either that or people no longer enjoy movies without sex and violence, where the characters and writers value faith and family and community.
What concerns me about some of the other reviews here is that people are panning Kevin Sorbo and the movie for other reasons that do not seem rational or fair. Either that or people no longer enjoy movies without sex and violence, where the characters and writers value faith and family and community.
This is a documentary about Christianity in America through the lens of one man. But with a twist: the filmmakers are perplexed that people of faith actually wholeheartedly believe in God and and work to uphold Biblical values in politics.
From what I can tell, the folks at AP/Frontline think that Christians should go to church on Sunday, but then behave secularly in their careers and in politics, because their faith is supposed to be padlocked inside a church building.
But this type of thinking only makes sense to atheists, and I'm not convinced that they are truly this naive. I see this as propaganda, because there's no good-faith attempt to see that Christians understandably want a voice in government, just like everyone else.
From what I can tell, the folks at AP/Frontline think that Christians should go to church on Sunday, but then behave secularly in their careers and in politics, because their faith is supposed to be padlocked inside a church building.
But this type of thinking only makes sense to atheists, and I'm not convinced that they are truly this naive. I see this as propaganda, because there's no good-faith attempt to see that Christians understandably want a voice in government, just like everyone else.