Monday, December 31, 2007

Christian Bookstores (Part 1): Tolkien, Hagee and Political-Zionism


A week before Christmas I went to a popular Christian bookstore in Richmond BC with a friend. I asked if the owner could point me to the section with Tolkien's Lord of the Rings so I could buy it for myself (though I have read it I have never owned it -- I borrowed my brother's copy). His response was interesting: "We don't carry it!" he said emphatically. "You mean you do not have it in stock?" I replied. "No. We don't carry Tolkien. That is not Christian!" he exclaimed loudly. I kind of stood there for a moment really taken off guard. "Oh because the wizards and goblins and stuff" I tried to reason. "No! It is not Christian!" He repeated. At this point my friend turned to me to see what was happening. He had been flipping through Joel Olsteen's latest book proudly set up at the front of the bookstore. He walked over. "Do you sell The Chronicles of Narnia?" he asked. "Of course" he said. "That is Christian" My friend and I looked at eachother in amazement, less at what he was saying and more about how agressive he was being about this whole discussion -- so matter-of-fact; so black and white.

I said "You do know that Tolkien had a key role in bringing Lewis to Christ right?" He stared at me. "Lord of the Rings is not Christian" he repeated. "So you have made a decision--" he cut me off. "No. The Christian booksellers association of Canada decided not to sell that book in Christian bookstores." "Oh" I said. "It's just that I have seen it in other Christian bookstores". He exclaimed "No you haven't!" I said "Yes I have; they sell it at my school with big cardboard cut-outs and posters." "Which school?" he said. "Regent College." He fired back "Well they shouldn't!" I told him that they do and then said thank you. My friend put Joel Olsteen back on the shelf and we walked past the table full of useless Christian consumer goods (doilies, "Testa-mints", and bumper stickers that say "My boss is a Jewish carpenter") and we left. I arrived in Toront and the next day went to Michell's -- A Christian bookstore in Ontario. I walked in and asked them if they sell LOTR thaey also said no. I didn't even ask why. And then I looked around and got more and more discouraged as I walked around. I felt as if I had walked into a political convention for Zionism.

Everywhere I looked were books about the "end times", and mostly about how Israel are the true chosen nation/people/country of God and that we (meaning Christians and America) should support them at all costs. The book that this Christian bookstore had on display that day for sale was the latest John Hagee book In Defense of Israel. As I looked at the book the irony of it all struck me. The Christian bookstores were protecting people from the evils of Hobitts and a Christian writer (Tolkien) who was used of God to mentor, disciple and lead to Christ, arguably the most influential Christian writer of the twentieth century (C.S. Lewis), and yet they were promoting an author who spends his life arguing in support of the American foreign policy to support the country of Israel at all costs (even in their illegitmate wars), and who, in his recent book, seems to deny the Messiahship of Jesus (see below).
I was baffled. I was transported back to footage of Hagee, which I saw recently, in which my jaw hit the floor. He was leading a massive coalition of Christians in Washington called Christian Zionists or something, he stood up in front of these people and called for a pre-emptive strike on Iran before they attack the country of Israel. Hagee's Comments on video. I said: "Wow. A Christian pastor of a church of 20,000 people just called for a pre-emptive strike on a country. How far we have strayed." In his most recent book Hagee seems to deny an essential Christian doctrine:
If there is not one verse of Scripture in the New Testament that says Jesus came to be the Messiah … And if Jesus refused by his words or actions to claim the be the Messiah to the Jews, then how can the Jews be blamed for rejecting what was never offered?” (page 136)

Now imagine how quickly people would be up in arms if one of the so-called liberal "Emerging" pastors made a comment such as this. People would be writing books saying "Oh those liberal pastors denying the essentials of Jesus!" but a key pastor in America says these things and the major Christian publishers/bookstores don't blink an eye. It sells because it is popular Christian writing (easy to consume, and thus easy to sell) -- the fact that it is heresy is no big deal I guess.

My fear is this: the bookstores / publishers are being driven by two things: the first is obvious and legitimate: sales -- people buy these books. Fine. But the second is what is scary -- these industries are driven by political and theological agenda's and that is wrong. I don't have a problem having this view point in book stores, the problem I have is that other theological/political viewpoints were not in the store! I will speak more about this next time (especially in relation to book publishers). For now: think on these things.

9 comments:

Anonymous said...

Have you tried Lawrence Books (best used book store in YVR) or even Gerry's Books in Richmond for your Tolkien? We may even have an extra copy. I'll check. I find Christian bookstores except for bible studies and bibles pretty useless. It is all what will sell as you said and I wouldn't touch some of the stuff like Hagee and Osteen with a 10 foot pole. Keep up the great rants. Jeanie T.

Mark Clark said...

Jeanie,

Thanks for the suggestion; and I have been to one of those bookstores you mentioned -- but one of them has shut down to go online... But yes they are seeming more and more useless -- they need all kinds of different Christian literature instead of just stuff that propagates one very specific theological stream even if it is the most popular!

And thanks for the Tolkien offer but Erin bought me a great set for Christmas! see you soon

Blessings

Anonymous said...

Which store was it in Richmond you got those comments at? Did you ever try House of James in Abbotsford? I know it's further out to drive, but they are pretty open to most things. Mike. S.

Anonymous said...

Mike,

It was Seraphim's Bookstore. Yeah it is a drive out there but it might be worth it...

My issue again is not that this view is present in the bookstore but that other views on these issues should be just as visible and in stock. It is a dangerous thing to become one-sided on non-essential's in this way.

Anonymous said...

Do you think that Hagee and Osteen's books could help people love others?

Mark Clark said...

Anyon.,

Of course they could. We can say that about anything. And I am not questioning their validity to do that (though Hagee might have an underlying slant away from Arabs, which doesn't help the present American/Arab as Enemies thing happening right now);

But yes of course they could help people love others; though I am not sure that keeps them protected from critical assessment within the Christian community.

Mark

Unknown said...

I like the casual yet purposeful inclusion of Joel Osteen in used in contrast to Tolkien. One quickly begins to wonder what the book merchant meant by "Christian." Would that merchant carry Dante's "Inferno" or Milton's "Paradise Lost"? Does he include John S. Spong's "A New Christianity for a New World"? Does it have to be orthodox or simply mention Jesus in a positive or sacred way?

Furthermore, I can only imagine what said merchant might say if he/she walked into a MCC (Mennonite Central Committee) store and saw that they not only sold the "Book of Mormon", but you might actually find Darwin's "Origin of the Species."

Anonymous said...

...please where can I buy a unicorn?

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