Lorsque le fondateur charismatique d'une méga-église évangélique dirigée par la riche famille Quinn annonce une expansion aux États-Unis, la collision entre la foi et l'ambition menace de dé... Tout lireLorsque le fondateur charismatique d'une méga-église évangélique dirigée par la riche famille Quinn annonce une expansion aux États-Unis, la collision entre la foi et l'ambition menace de déchirer sa famille et son église.Lorsque le fondateur charismatique d'une méga-église évangélique dirigée par la riche famille Quinn annonce une expansion aux États-Unis, la collision entre la foi et l'ambition menace de déchirer sa famille et son église.
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Incredible performances - Richard Roxburgh is truly one of the best actors around today. Great writing, stunning cinematography, complex character studies, nuanced, intelligent music, editing and stylised direction. The twists and turns are incredibly compelling. There are still lots of unresolved stories so would love season 2 asap! We binged it all in one day. Stylistically it's part Succession, part Fall of the House of Usher, and its own style of mystery and drama. Prosper is a brilliant achievement - a stunning exploration of hubris, family, love, desire, hypocrisy, deception, influence and the fall of man. Wow! Very excited for season 2!
When the trailers for this series first started to come out, I was skeptical at first as it seemed to be taking the approach of attacking the church and villainising modern Christians rather than presenting a balanced view of the current state of the modern church today.
As a man of faith myself, also processing the realities of faith and belief, I found this series pleasantly surprising. It masterfully takes on many of the current cultural issues of Christian Churches developed in the western world and the reality of creating more harm than good, despite the best intentions, as we see very human and relatable characters throughout, especially if you have ever spent any significant time in a mega church.
For one, they nail the culture of these types of churches, from the theological perspectives, to the buildings, the little nuances in rituals, and even some of the more unpleasant cliche's of Head Pastors with a dysfunctional family. The acting and cinematography is stellar, and the message conveyed by the end of it I think is very important, although uncomfortable for some modern Christians who may still feel compelled to defend the churches they dedicate themselves to. All in all, this is certainly a very niche topic, but brilliantly made and informative, thumbs up from me.
As a man of faith myself, also processing the realities of faith and belief, I found this series pleasantly surprising. It masterfully takes on many of the current cultural issues of Christian Churches developed in the western world and the reality of creating more harm than good, despite the best intentions, as we see very human and relatable characters throughout, especially if you have ever spent any significant time in a mega church.
For one, they nail the culture of these types of churches, from the theological perspectives, to the buildings, the little nuances in rituals, and even some of the more unpleasant cliche's of Head Pastors with a dysfunctional family. The acting and cinematography is stellar, and the message conveyed by the end of it I think is very important, although uncomfortable for some modern Christians who may still feel compelled to defend the churches they dedicate themselves to. All in all, this is certainly a very niche topic, but brilliantly made and informative, thumbs up from me.
I attended Hillsong Church in Sydney for 6 years and this is a very accurate portrayal and quite insightful. The writers have obviously done their research, and it's quite surprising how on point they are! The thinly veiled George Aghajanian (HS general manager) character (Eli) is particularly accurate. It must have taken some good research to reveal the type of person he is, considering how guarded they can be.
The series also depicts Brian Houston (Cal) very well, highlighting his struggles with drugs, money, power, infidelity, and his overall disingenuousness. They did well to show the 'wizard' behind the curtain. I guess this is the problem with all rich 'celebrity' pastors, where eventually their growing hubris gives them a self-rationalised clear conscience to break ethical and Biblical boundaries. Congregants are isolated and marginalised as the money raising intensifies and people at the top get rich. Eventually this same hubris brings them tumbling down.
There is also the exploitation of staff, volunteers and Hillsong College students, which has led to a revolving door of burned out, disillusioned assistant pastors, leaders and church members.
Don't get me wrong, Pentecostal/Charismatic churches are a real true blessing (so maybe don't binge-watch this?). Technically, any church that has a membership of over 1500 people is a "megachurch", but if you happen to be a member of a charismatic megachurch this series will help you be more critical and less naïve; simply because of the large amounts of tax-free money changing hands with no external accountability.
It should also motivate you to question and hold to account the ethics of any large Pentecostal/Charismatic church (regardless of size) that mimics/models the methodology of Hillsong. Question your Pastor's motivation and ethics. Check the percentage of tithing actually going directly to the needy and not just 'building funds' and hidden tax-free fringe benefits for elite leaders and payments to/from your pastors to reciprocating guest speakers.
Definitely worth watching but please don't let it turn you off finding a good, ethical Bible-based Pentecostal/Charismatic church to attend!! But if you are already attending one as a congregant and you feel you are either being marginalised, disconnected or exploited, then you should probably find another church.
The series also depicts Brian Houston (Cal) very well, highlighting his struggles with drugs, money, power, infidelity, and his overall disingenuousness. They did well to show the 'wizard' behind the curtain. I guess this is the problem with all rich 'celebrity' pastors, where eventually their growing hubris gives them a self-rationalised clear conscience to break ethical and Biblical boundaries. Congregants are isolated and marginalised as the money raising intensifies and people at the top get rich. Eventually this same hubris brings them tumbling down.
There is also the exploitation of staff, volunteers and Hillsong College students, which has led to a revolving door of burned out, disillusioned assistant pastors, leaders and church members.
Don't get me wrong, Pentecostal/Charismatic churches are a real true blessing (so maybe don't binge-watch this?). Technically, any church that has a membership of over 1500 people is a "megachurch", but if you happen to be a member of a charismatic megachurch this series will help you be more critical and less naïve; simply because of the large amounts of tax-free money changing hands with no external accountability.
It should also motivate you to question and hold to account the ethics of any large Pentecostal/Charismatic church (regardless of size) that mimics/models the methodology of Hillsong. Question your Pastor's motivation and ethics. Check the percentage of tithing actually going directly to the needy and not just 'building funds' and hidden tax-free fringe benefits for elite leaders and payments to/from your pastors to reciprocating guest speakers.
Definitely worth watching but please don't let it turn you off finding a good, ethical Bible-based Pentecostal/Charismatic church to attend!! But if you are already attending one as a congregant and you feel you are either being marginalised, disconnected or exploited, then you should probably find another church.
Enjoyable, all to poignant depiction of an evangelical church. So much glitz and glamour, with Rebecca Gibney once more displaying excellence in her character portrayal of the family Matriach.
Richard Roxborough managed to convince me that he indeed thinks God speaks to him and he has deep seated beliefs that he is making the world a better place despite being so flawed.
I can see links to Hillsong, Sheila and the oOrange people to name two.
Great music, written by great local musicians.
Characters are so extremely and wonderfully flawed
Everyone has their own agendas and foibles.
I certainly hope there will be a season two.
Richard Roxborough managed to convince me that he indeed thinks God speaks to him and he has deep seated beliefs that he is making the world a better place despite being so flawed.
I can see links to Hillsong, Sheila and the oOrange people to name two.
Great music, written by great local musicians.
Characters are so extremely and wonderfully flawed
Everyone has their own agendas and foibles.
I certainly hope there will be a season two.
Right off the bat I will say this is one of the slickest looking Australian shows I have seen. It looks expensive and I suspect it probably is.
Five minutes in it was clear the writers and producers are big fans of Succession as the family dynamics are very similar, though in this show the setting is a Sydney mega church. Most Australians will appreciate the direct associations with the Hillsong church right down to the fictional Bieber-esque pop star. There's also a bit of Jim Baker in the Roxburgh character, who is something of a cliche when it comes to the US megachurch culture.
For these reasons I felt I have seen the story before. But the pacing is fast and the performances are very good so it's a positive review from me all up, even if I wanted more originality.
Five minutes in it was clear the writers and producers are big fans of Succession as the family dynamics are very similar, though in this show the setting is a Sydney mega church. Most Australians will appreciate the direct associations with the Hillsong church right down to the fictional Bieber-esque pop star. There's also a bit of Jim Baker in the Roxburgh character, who is something of a cliche when it comes to the US megachurch culture.
For these reasons I felt I have seen the story before. But the pacing is fast and the performances are very good so it's a positive review from me all up, even if I wanted more originality.
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- How many seasons does Prosper have?Alimenté par Alexa
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