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Thursday, November 15, 2007
Matt Barber :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Golden Compass Has no Moral Compass
by Matt Barber
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With its fantasy world backdrop, sympathetic talking animals and extravagant battle scenes, the new movie, The Golden Compass, may resemble C.S. Lewis’ The Chronicles of Narnia. But parents be advised, this film — which is very intentionally being marketed toward children — is nothing of the sort.

The Golden Compass was created with the benefit of a multimillion dollar budget and big name actors such as Nicole Kidman, Kevin Bacon, and Sam Elliot. It opens December 7, and promises to be action-packed and visually stunning in the epic tradition of Narnia or The Lord of the Rings.

But upon closer review, it becomes abundantly clear that both this movie and the man behind it have a very certain anti-Christian axe to grind.

Based on the first of three secular humanist children’s books by avowed atheist and British author Phillip Pullman, The Golden Compass provides the opening “down with God” salvo in the author’s His Dark Materials trilogy.

Pullman leaves little question as to his books’ central theme. “I don’t profess any religion,” he is quoted as saying. “I don’t think it’s possible that there is a God; I have the greatest difficulty understanding what is meant by the words ‘spiritual’ or ‘spirituality.’”

Ironically, Pullman’s confident pronouncement that there is no God appears to take an exclusive backseat to his hatred for the very God he denies. “My books are about killing God,” he told The Sydney Morning Herald in a 2003 interview. And in the trilogy’s final offering, The Amber Spyglass, he does just that — he knocks off the Almighty in a delusional fit of grandeur.

Pullman’s books drip with moral relativism, that deceptively sweet, yet fruitless nectar of the secular humanist. His portrayal of God — which is clearly intended to personify the Christian church — is that of an evil authoritarian who spitefully stifles human creativity, arbitrarily punishing mankind for very naturally and properly entertaining base impulses with unfettered license.

In a telling and pivotal moment in the series, a former nun named “Mary Malone,” who is a central character, poignantly reflects upon her realization that God does not exist:

“There’s no one to fret, no one to condemn, no one to bless me for being a good girl, no one to punish me for being wicked. Heaven was empty. I didn’t know whether God had died, or whether there never had been a God at all.”

And isn’t that what atheism is all about, really? Our fallen desire to have, “no one to punish [us] for being wicked.” If we can convince ourselves that there is no God, then we escape accountability for what we do, or so we believe. It’s not so much a-theism as it is anti-theism. In fact, atheism is every bit a religion as any other. But in the church of the non-believer, the high priest is cloaked beneath the vestment of pseudo-“science” and parishioners worship at the altar of moral anarchy. Continued...

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About The Author
J. Matt Barber is Director of Cultural Affairs with Liberty Counsel and also serves as Associate Dean with Liberty University School of Law.
 
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And...
Secondly: "When your mother is a professional writer and you've been exposed to great literature your whole life, even at 14 you can be far more astute then the professional reviewers. BTW, not all of them are in agreement with the "Pullman is brilliant" crowd and the ones that are lack credibility." Do you think that professional reviewers, many of whom are themselves succesful published authors, have read less great literature than your daughter? I have not seen a poor review of Pullman from any respected source. I am sure you have lots of them and can explain to me why these reviewers are lacking in credibility. So go ahead - find me some negative reviews of Pullman's work and tell me why the positive reviewers lack credibility. In truth, the only one who lacks credibility is you, because not only do you big yourself up but you also praise the same misplaced arrogance in your children.

Aurorawatcher
I would like to take issue with a couple of points you made in your last post.

Firstly: "She picked up The Golden Compass at a friend's house, read three pages and gave me her assessment, unrequested. Lousy and manipulative writing." Now, for all I know your 14 year-old could be a genius. I don't know. But I suspect that most people would consider it impossible to reach a final verdict on books that are what, 1,200 pages in total, after reading just three pages. I looked at the first three pages of The Golden Compass last night just to see what was in them - not a lot, other than placing Lyra and her daemon in a room at Oxford. Any sort of judgement, never mind "manipulative" or "lousy", is impossible to make. I would encourage your child to read anything in its entirety before passing judgement on it. Does she read three pages of a book she is her schoolwork on before writing a report? I hope not. What twaddle.
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