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Home > 2007 > DecemberChristianity Today, December, 2007  |   |  
The Chronicles of Atheism
When The Golden Compass hits theaters this month, many will be introduced to the works of Philip Pullman, a writer who detests C.S. Lewis's fantasy world.




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Writer-director Chris Weitz, a self-described "lapsed-Catholic crypto-Buddhist," said in one interview that the film will not refer to "the church." But the movie's official website indicates that the cruel scientist Mrs. Coulter works for a villainous "dogma"-enforcing entity known as "the Magisterium," a Latin term that, in the real world, signifies the Catholic church's teaching authority.

Nicole Kidman, who plays Mrs. Coulter, told Entertainment Weekly the film "has been watered down a little," adding, "I was raised Catholic [and] I wouldn't be able to do this film if I thought it were at all anti-Catholic."

Then again: "If the first film was a film in isolation, I would say it's no big deal," says Tony Watkins, managing editor of the U.K.-based website www.culturewatch.org and author of Dark Matter (Damaris/IVP), a book that analyzes the trilogy from a Christian framework. "But it isn't in isolation, and it is part of a bigger picture."

However, Watkins, while disagreeing with Pullman's worldview, says he appreciates the way Pullman raises important religious questions, especially in secularized Great Britain, where the books have already been dramatized on radio and in live theater.

"While I don't want to encourage out-and-out attacks on the gospel, obviously, truth can stand for itself if it is given a fair hearing," says Watkins. "And one thing that this story does is it gets the [Christian] story into the public sphere. [In the U.K.], that has often been a bit of a challenge. But when there's some clear opposition, that's often when the Christian voice gets heard."

'A transcendent spiritualism'

Several observers argue that the books of atheist and materialist Pullman point in a more spiritual direction.

One of the trilogy's main narrative devices is the "daemon." In The Golden Compass's universe, every human being is accompanied by an animal that reflects that person's soul. The daemons of young children constantly change shape, from one animal to another, because the children have not yet settled into their adult personalities.

Watkins writes that the relationship between humans and their daemons—"united yet distinct"—ironically models the Trinity. And in Shedding Light on His Dark Materials (Tyndale), Kurt Bruner and Jim Ware argue that this device underscores, however unintentionally, the Christian belief that "personality and relationship" stand at the center of the universe.

"Our intention from the beginning was to say, well, here's a guy who on the surface, overtly, is attacking Christianity and the church and the idea of God—and even saying that he wants to kill God," says Ware, "yet we can see ways in which I think he pays homage to Christian truth, maybe without intending to or even knowing what he's doing."

Another central device in the trilogy is "particles of consciousness," or "Dust," which coalesces to form angels and human souls. In the final book, the spirits of the dead are freed from the afterlife; their particles disintegrate and are reabsorbed into the universe. Just as their physical bodies decompose when they die, so too do their spirits return to the earth.

"Pullman the writer is creating a world filled with the reality of a transcendent spiritualism, even though he rejects that cognitively," says Bruner. "And that spiritualism is much more in line with Spinoza and New Age mysticism, or Eastern pantheism."

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 227 comments.See all comments
JOhn Downunder   Posted: December 11, 2007 7:49 AM
Only if Religion were begot from the face of the earth then the true essence of this planet and it's kingdoms shine like it should. Religion and fantasy are one and the same represented by a coin and by the same forces who create both. There are truths hidden deep within and there are false things painted big like the sun on a midday summer day. Are we not in a dream world where the ream ends when we subject the body to sleep? Life is not what it seems to be. The falsities of life are everywhere. Where theres fantasists there you will find war mongering religionists. You could never find the common ground of harmony and peace in between. Step back and view your world from a different angle, there you will see that all is not what it seems to be. Peace is but a thought away. Try it it is powerful and real. Let your thoughts create your tomorrow.

MBURU KIMANI   Posted: December 11, 2007 6:57 AM
When such films get in to the market rather than find fault in Christian faith offer a helping hand in spreading the Gospel. think of split in the eary church it facilitated a wider coverage of the same, promoting curosity to that religion thus populorising it even to far of people who didn't have the slittest qure of the trueth. emptiness due to caramity or sort of problems compells human beings to seek or think of how and when can a suppernatural power or force help them out of pain troubling them theirfore though straineous the film in a way will bring many to their creater

Daphne   Posted: December 11, 2007 6:24 AM
I have read the books. They are imaginative,colourful and a darn good read - and that is all. Like Dan Brown (and his forgotten Da Vinci Code,) Phillip Pullman is just a story teller. If his books were true they would be non-fiction and why does he think he is the first to 'suss' it all out anyway! Books like these and the infamous 'God Delusion' (which I have read) will all end up in car boot sales and charity shops, read or unread - whatever - then there will be the next 'sensation' I will see the 'The Golden Compass' because I love fantasy films including, and especially Harry Potter, but my Christian faith is unshakable and always will be, because it is the Truth.

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