News

The Force Is Not With Them

“Over 100,000 residents of Australia and New Zealand claim their religion is Jedi”

In mid-2001, 124,224 Australians and New Zealanders told their national censuses that their religion was “Jedi,” which reflected both their love of the Star Wars movies and their rejection of “organized religion.” “It was a way of saying to traditional churches, ‘You’re not providing what we want,'” Chris Brennan, director of the Star Wars Appreciation Society of Australia, told Wired News. But, Wired reported, Star Wars proved a false religion. Fan clubs have dried up, and sites like JediFaith.com and JediReligion.com have disappeared. “The latest Lucas film has put a muffle on many people who might want to pursue the Jedi religion,” says Jedi Faith’s Peter Rohr.

Copyright © 2002 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Related Elsewhere

Related articles include:

Census Jedis not ‘true believers’: fansThe Australian Star Wars Appreciation Society says most of the people who listed their religion as Jedi on the 2001 census were probably not ‘true believers’ (ABC News, Australia)

May the farce be with youMore than 70,000 Australians identified their religion as Jedi, Jedi Knight or Jedi-related in last year’s national census (The Sydney Morning Herald)

This summer, Douglas LeBlanc reviewed the most recent movie and looked at how the Jedi confront evil. For CT movie reviews, see our Film archive and also our Film Forum area, a weekly roundup of what Christian critics are saying about new and noteworthy movies.

Film Forum discussions of Attack of the Clones included “A New Hope for Star Wars Fans” and “Bad Boys Trying to Be Good.”

In the March/April issue of Christianity Today sister publication Books & Culture, professor and writer Telford Work examined the reactions of fans to Episode I: The Phantom Menace.

The Star Wars website has more information than you ever thought you’d want to know about Episode II: Attack of the Clones, including a series of behind-the-scenes videos.

Also in this issue

Rick Warren: Just a regular guy who may be America's most influential pastor.

Cover Story

A Regular Purpose-Driven Guy

Tim Stafford

Manhattan Ministry a Year Later

Tony Carnes

Gray Matter and the Soul

The Long View: The Enemy Within

Virtue via Vouchers

Stephen Carter's novel

Hiawatha Bray

Elegy for a 9/11 Hero

Cindy Crosby

Righteous (and Other) Anger

Cindy Crosby

Graham's Current Events

Cindy Crosby

"Rich, Delighted Christians"

Cindy Crosby

Guilt Good and Bad

Kitsch Watch

Prostitute Murders Spur Ministry

Keeping Their Heads Down

Restricting Faith

Lincoln Brunner

Option for Alienated Baptist Missionaries

Corrie Cutrer

Aramaic May Disappear in Four Decades

Desert Springs

Richard A. Kauffman

New Study Answers Many Criticisms of White House's Plans

Mark Stricherz

Quenching Worst-Case Scenarios

Sharon Mager

News

Go Figure

Wire Story

House: No Church Politicking

Religion News Service

What Is Hip?

Christianity Today Editorial

Review

Seize the Virtue

Douglas LeBlanc

Review

Hometown Legend

Douglas LeBlanc

Review

Tribulation Force

Douglas LeBlanc

Civic-Minded and Heavenly Good

James W. Skillen

Killing a Pandemic

Christianity Today editorial

Jesus Freak

David Neff and Timothy Morgan

2012: A School Odyssey

Randall Balmer

Faith-Based Fight: White House moves forward with or without Senate.

Mark Stricherz

Nigeria: War-weary Muslims and Christians talk peace.

Ecumenical News International

Forcing Abortions

There Goes the Neighborhood

Quotation Marks

News

Entertainment: Jonah has boffo box office.

Todd Hertz

View issue

Our Latest

A Case for In-Person Voting

As a volunteer at a polling station, I saw what we lose when we choose convenience over communal participation.

Review

We Need More Than Generalities About Beauty and Justice

Makoto and Haejin Fujimura’s new book aims to help Christians think deeply about how we live but falls short on details.

Excerpt

American Presbyterianism Was Born Amid Chaos

D.G. Hart

An excerpt from Protestants and Patriots: Presbyterians in the Age of Revolution.

The Bulletin

Classroom Tech, Anti-Trump Protests, Troops in Iran, and Crisis in Cuba

Schools question tech for students, No Kings protests continue, US sends troops to Iran, and a repressive situation in Cuba.

The Syllabus

What’s the Fix For the Affordability Crisis?

Compiled by Haleluya Hadero

Baylor University students tell us what they think about Zohran Mamdani, Ezra Klein’s Abundance, and the rising cost of housing.

News

1,000 Kenyans Fought for Russia in Ukraine. Many Were Duped.

Pius Sawa

False advertising lured Africans to Eastern Europe for jobs, then recruiters pressured them into the army.

Review

The Meaning of Your Life Can’t Rest on You

Arthur Brooks’s new book is enjoyable, smart, and often wise, but a search for true meaning must bring us to Christ.

Apple PodcastsDown ArrowDown ArrowDown Arrowarrow_left_altLeft ArrowLeft ArrowRight ArrowRight ArrowRight Arrowarrow_up_altUp ArrowUp ArrowAvailable at Amazoncaret-downCloseCloseEmailEmailExpandExpandExternalExternalFacebookfacebook-squareGiftGiftGooglegoogleGoogle KeephamburgerInstagraminstagram-squareLinkLinklinkedin-squareListenListenListenChristianity TodayCT Creative Studio Logologo_orgMegaphoneMenuMenupausePinterestPlayPlayPocketPodcastprintRSSRSSSaveSaveSaveSearchSearchsearchSpotifyStitcherTelegramTable of ContentsTable of Contentstwitter-squareWhatsAppXYouTubeYouTube