The Burr in the Burbs

"I cling to my Lord Christ like a burr on cloth." – Katherine Luther

Archive for the ‘Movies’ Category

“What Goes Up…

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Iceberg What Goes Up...…must come down.”  There is a movie, new to DVD, that you may be interested in checking out called What Goes Up.  Admittedly, most critics gave it a poor review.  But what do they know?

Like all good stories, this movie asks some intriguing questions.

The film is about heroism.  Why do we need heroes?  And what makes a true hero anyway?  No simplistic answers here.  People are never all good or all bad.  Each one of us has the capability of doing something horrendously evil or amazingly good at any given moment.  We idolize our heroes, putting them up on pedestals.  But people are always more complicated and contradictory.  Bad people sometimes do good things.  And good people often do bad things.  Sometimes people do something wonderful even while in the midst of being bad, and  vice versa.  Don’t mistake complex and textured character development for moral relativism here.

This movie is about the shallowness of hero worship and the need for honest relationships based on love and long-suffering.  Understanding human nature is confusing and difficult.  Things are seldom what they seem.  People are like icebergs.  What you see is only the tip.  It may sparkle in the sunshine, but there is a hulking mass below the surface ready to sink the Titanic if given half a chance.

Remember that what goes up, must eventually come down and that there is a cloud in front of every silver lining.

 What Goes Up...

Written by Pastor Scott Stiegemeyer

July 7th, 2009 at 2:58 pm

Posted in Movies,Pop Culture

“Don’t Come Knocking” from Wim Wenders

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229737427 c1b63bb74a m Dont Come Knocking from Wim WendersWhat if someone told the story of the Prodigal Son with an inventive twist? The story of the Prodigal Father. What would that look like?

In 2005, the masterful German director Wim Wenders, well known for the fabulous Wings of Desire, gave us Don’t Come Knocking starring Sam Shepard. The story was, in fact, written by actor Shepard.

Don’t Come Knocking is the story of Howard Spence, famous movie western star, who in late middle age realizes that he’s squandered his life on boozing, womanizing and whatnot. Seeking some form of redemption or inner peace, he sets off on a journey to reconnect with family and two adult children he never knew.

One of the adult children, a daughter who is named Sky and played by Canadian gem Sarah Polley, has gone to the place where her father was last seen to stand watch for his return.

The other child, a rebellious alt country musician named Earl, doesn’t want to ever seen his father and wishes he were dead.

Howard Spence is wrung out by years of wild and wanton living. He goes to the nearest thing he has for a home looking for . . . he’s not exactly sure what he is looking for at first. Forgiveness? Reconciliation? He knows he’s not worthy to be called anyone’s dad or husband. What he finds is not what he expected, but is better in every way.

I have a thirteen year old son who is interested in film-making and has begun directing and producing his own homemade digital masterpieces. I told him he should watch this movie if only for what he calls the “camera-ology.”

Tenderly told, beautifully shot, exquisitely performed; don’t miss Don’t Come Knocking.

cc Dont Come Knocking from Wim Wenders photo credit: jae michie

 Dont Come Knocking from Wim Wenders

Written by Pastor Scott Stiegemeyer

June 5th, 2009 at 7:10 am

“Paradox,” New Time-Loopy Series on BBC

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51V252BA0FL. SL160  Paradox, New Time Loopy Series on BBC

Remember the Tom Cruise flick, Minority Report Paradox, New Time Loopy Series on BBC ?  It was based on the classic story by Philip K. Dick.   Set in the near future, the police were able to detect future crimes and stop them from happening.  The BBC will soon air a new series with a similar premise called Paradox. It actually sounds quite promising.

The lead director of the series, Simon Cellan Jones, said the series “will leave the audience asking themselves dark, complicated questions about fate, the future and who controls it.”

Read the BBC story here.

Who controls the future?  That is a very penetrating question.  All people are anxious about what tomorrow brings.  There is only One who is worthy to open the seal to the future.  And that is the Lamb who was slain (Rev. 5).  We can rest knowing our future days are in God’s hand.

 Paradox, New Time Loopy Series on BBC

Written by Pastor Scott Stiegemeyer

June 1st, 2009 at 10:35 am

How Geek Became Chic

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star trek How Geek Became Chic

Excited about the soon to premiere new Star Trek flic?  Check out this perceptive article by Steve Daly in Newsweek.  When the short-lived series first hit the airwaves in 1966, the Cold War war was angrily blazing away.  But produce Gene Roddenberry broke the mold with his (mostly) optimistic view of the future.  The general thrust of the science fiction to come out of the 50s and 60s was generated by fear.  Fear of the bomb.  Fear of communists.  Fear of spies.  Fear of desegregation.  And so forth.  Giant ants, spawned by nuclear mishaps, were attacking people.  Well camouflaged pod people were walking among us and destroying our way of life.  Space aliens were invading American cities.  Most books and films of the genre at that time were cautionary or envisioned a dystopic future for mankind.  Roddenberry challenged us to see a different possibility, a future earth where the races got along, working side-by-side, a future earth without war or poverty or swine flu pandemics.  I said earlier that he was “mostly” optimistic because the dread of the other was still evident in the episodes which encounter extraterrestrial hostiles.  The Romulans and the Klingons were probably supposed to reflect the Soviets.  Their swarthy appearance and overt bellicosity, however, makes me think of Islam.  As a Christian, I know that Roddenberry’s idealistic humanism was naive, but that doesn’t mean I cannot appreciate the important and meaningful way he impacted the culture with his ideas.

The newest incarnation of the franchise is expected by some to renew it and by others to betray it.  I know there are lots of regular Americans who have never liked sci-fi, fantasy, superheroes, horror, the more speculative type of literature.  If this upcoming film is just an interstellar car chase, just Die Hard set in space, it will be a blockbuster but will miss out on the opportunity to ponder bigger topics of human identity the genre, at its best, excels at.  Or I could be wrong and it might help to popularize and mainstream what we dweebs have long loved.

 How Geek Became Chic

Written by Pastor Scott Stiegemeyer

May 2nd, 2009 at 11:29 am

Concordia Lutheran High School Chapel Homily

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easter lily1 300x199 Concordia Lutheran High School Chapel Homily

Concordia Lutheran High School , Fort Wayne, IN
April 22, 2009
Text: 1 Cor 12:12-20; John 15:1-8

Just to introduce myself: I am Pastor Scott Stiegemeyer.  I’m the Director of Admission at Concordia Theological Seminary.  I go all over the country talking to young men about becoming pastors and young women about becoming deaconesses, but that is not why I am here with you today.  I am here with you now to proclaim the good news of free salvation through Jesus Christ.

I understand that this is Fine Arts Week.  You are emphasizing the

importance of the fine arts: such as music, and painting and drawing and sculpture or graphic design, and poetry or drama or creative writing…

I also noticed, according to my Google calendar that today is Earth Day.  Many in our culture recognize this, not particularly from a Christian perspective.  Many in the green ecological movement are subject to various neo-pagan ideas about the earth and the place of human beings in the ecosystem.

As Christians, we can participate in these things in our own ways because we understand that God is the Creator of the planet and all that lives on it, everything from the mighty sequoia forest to the mold that grows in between the tiles in your bathroom.  Everything from the tiniest microbes that live their whole lives on particles of dust inside your pillow cases to you yourselves, young men and women, the pinnacle of God’s creative work.

God is the maker of all things, visible and invisible.  The earth and all that is in it belongs to the Lord.  We do not really own anything.  Not even our bodies truly belong to us.  We belong to God.  Everything we have is really a gift from God, or you might say, on loan from God.

God is a giver.  He gives us our bodies, our skills, our talents, our abilities and all of our resources.  Christians understands that with God as the creator and owner, we are merely just stewards or managers of the resources we possess.  That includes things like the forests and the seas and the soil beneath our feet.  It also includes our voices and hands, our minds and hearts.  We may use these things, but whatsoever you do, do all things to bring glory to God.

Just two weeks ago, in our churches and around the world, Christians

celebrated the most holy day of the year, the Queen of Feasts.

Easter, as you probably know, is the commemoration of the glorious resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead.  We believe that Jesus died on the cross, but that he literally and bodily came back to life again, arose and then ascended into heaven, where He sits at the right hand of the Father ruling and governing the universe.

The Christian story does not end there, of course.  We also believe Jesus will return and when He returns, He will judge the living and the dead.  If that happens a long time from now, and if you or I happen to be dead at the time of His return, He will raise you literally and bodily from the grave.  And all of us will be changed.

Now, I’m going to tie this in, you’ll see, to FINE ARTS WEEK and EARTH DAY, but first I need to make one other point.  And that point is that people today and people of all times have been concerned with death.  Understandably.  Death is really our number one problem.  Not the war in Iraq or the wobbly economy.  Those are big problems, but ultimately, the greatest problem we have is DEATH and the prospect of death.  Scientific study has shown that the death rate among living things is 100%.  All of us will encounter it.

The mythology of our popular culture tries to deal with the concept of death in weird and fanciful manners.  One of the most popular genres of entertainment for Americans your age is the horror genre.  And as I look at it, the horror genre is one of the few genres of entertainment that seriously wrestles with the hard question of what are we going to do about death.

3465021025 d1a933bbe3 m Concordia Lutheran High School Chapel Homily
Image by heather via Flickr

My wife is an English professor and one of her favorite authors is Jane Austen.  You’ve probably heard of the classic, Pride and Prejudice. Well, now the big hit is this one: Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: The Classic Regency Romance -Now with Ultraviolent Zombie Mayhem! Concordia Lutheran High School Chapel HomilyWhat do you think of that?

And here is another book I’ve been reading lately: Let the Right One In Concordia Lutheran High School Chapel Homily. It’s a best-selling Swedish vampire novel that was recently adapted into a critically acclaimed film.

In popular culture right now, especially for young adults, zombies and vampires are very in style.  Zombies are the living dead.  Vampires are the undead.  Think also of the Frankenstein story.  There you have science trying to overcome death with medicine and technology, to bring dead body parts back to life as a supreme man.  It always fails.  Our human attempts to conquer death will always fail.

God is the Creator.  His proper work is to create life and make it prosper and flourish.  It is not His proper work to kill or destroy.  Sin has caused that to happen in His otherwise good creation.  Like all the earth, we have been tainted with sin, polluted, if you will.

The Green movement teaches us to recycle.  Recycle your paper, your plastic, your metal good.  Recycling makes sense to me.  Then you can use a product once.  When it is all used up, you throw it away.  It gets recycled and then you can use it again.  And the circle goes on and on.

But God, as usual, has a better way.  Easter is not God’s ultimate recycling project.  A man lives, gets used up.  He dies, gets tossed away like garbage.  Then God recycles Him and He lives again and the circle goes on.  That is not the way it is with God.  When God raised Jesus Christ from the dead, it was not just a recycling.  It was a glorious transformation.  The life that comes after the resurrection will never wear out, it will never get used up.  Jesus will never need to be tossed away again.

The same thing that happened to Jesus, happens to you, for you.  Through your holy baptism, you have been united to Christ’s death and resurrection.  His resurrection power is now alive within you, which is just me saying that Jesus Christ is alive within you.  And though, yes, your current body and spirit will one day wear out, get used up and need to be planted into the ground.  But you, like Jesus, will rise with a glorious life that will never end.  In Jesus’ name.  Amen.

 Concordia Lutheran High School Chapel Homily

Written by Pastor Scott Stiegemeyer

April 22nd, 2009 at 3:32 pm

What’s Your Favorite Sci-Fi Book or Movie?

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2458233987 5f5951a48e m Whats Your Favorite Sci Fi Book or Movie?I came across this blog post called 32 Sci-Fi Novels You Should Read.  I’ve heard of almost all of them and I’ve read fourteen of them.  Science Fiction is not my favorite genre, but I try to read three or four good sci-fi books a year.  I’m behind schedule for 2008, having only read 2001: A Space Odyssey Whats Your Favorite Sci Fi Book or Movie? in July.

It seems to me that, other than the heritage of Gene Roddenberry, most science fiction is pessimistic, or at least skeptical, regarding the limits of science and technology.  The best of the genre is more than childish adventures of robots and space aliens.  It ponders the nature of man, and his ability to save himself.

One of the legacies of the so-called Enlightenment is a thoroughgoing optimism about human nature.  Add the progressivism introduced by Charles Darwin, mid 19th century, the belief that everything is evolving, that is, getting better and better through time and you have the philosophical basis for a sci-fi tale.  What will life be like in the future?  Utopian visions, at least in literature, seem to be far outnumbered by dystopic ones.  The limits of science and technology and the hubris of man are common themes.  In this, I usually find much science fiction more realistic than not.

cc Whats Your Favorite Sci Fi Book or Movie? photo credit: Don Solo

Written by Pastor Scott Stiegemeyer

November 3rd, 2008 at 6:24 am

Bill Maher’s “Religulous,” Simply Ridiculous

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According to Dr. Craig Hazen of Biola University, Bill Maher’s new film, Religulous, most of which is devoted to mocking Christianity, is built upon shaky intellectual foundations.  You can read Hazen’s full review here.  I haven’t seen the film yet myself.

Dr. Hazen, the head of the Christian Apologetics program at Biola, points out that Maher never bothers to consult any serious scholars for the defense of Christianity, choosing instead to display fringe expressions as if they were representative.  His approach is lazy.  Of course, out of the billions of religious people in the world, you can highlight examples from kitsch to extremism to make your case the religion is useless at best, dangerous at worst.  Isn’t this the basic “straw man” fallacy where you caraciturize your opponent, making it easy to knock him down while avoiding a real confrontation of serious ideas?

Hazen notes that one of Bill Maher’s favorite attacks is that boring old canard that the Bible is unreliable as a historical document because the Gospels were all written generations after the death of Jesus.  One of my favorite refutations of that proposition comes from this article in Skeptic Magazine.  Non-Christian historian, Robert Sheaffer dismantles the more ludicrous claims of The Da Vinci Code, including the idea that the Gospels are late documents.

Written by Pastor Scott Stiegemeyer

October 17th, 2008 at 5:33 am

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