Archives for posts with tag: comics
"Diversity" Interpreted

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Why are so few other “alternative lifestyles” celebrated?

There are more and more stories appearing on our continual slide down this slippery slope…

A law professor attempts to use a homosexual rights ruling to defend a polygamous family in Utah.

Challenging the illegality of consensual polygamy.

Why Normalizing Same-Sex Parenting Inevitably Led to Triple-Parenting

Why Are We Surprised With the Push for ‘Pedophile Rights’?

The "Heaven Bound" Hypocrite's Highway Hello

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Aside from Jesus, there are no genuine heroes in the Bible. Each man and woman has their character flaw and it’s there in black and white for generations to take note of. Jacob was a cheat and deceived his own dad. Moses killed an Egyptian. Saul (the king) was eaten up with jealousy. David couldn’t discipline his children or curb his lust. Solomon was a little too ready to marry just about any woman. You can read all about it. That the Bible would record these things for posterity, I think, points to its inspiration. People typically try to make themselves saints on paper.

Nowadays, hypocrisy affects a lot of us. And that’s probably one reason why Jesus spoke a lot about it. In fact, it could be said that, generally speaking, the bulk of biblical narratives are accurate, faithful records about hypocritical behavior of hypocrites. But I say what better way to show us the reality of mankind than to focus it on that embarrassingly true element of each and every one of us — myself included!

But the point is not to try to downplay hypocrisy and make society accept it. Neither should we be easy on ourselves. No. We should pray for grace and strength to get rid of those bad habits, whatever they might be, so that they won’t distract from the Message. After all, if we’re going to point to Jesus, the Son of God, then let’s use our index finger, not our middle one.

Constitution of the Divine Foot-in-the-Door Resistance Army

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Dedicated to all those tolerant people who want everyone who doesn’t agree with them to shut up.

With a handshake,

Joshua / NAA

The One Thing Theists and Atheists Agree On

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What If Moral Relativists Wrote Comic Books?

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Angry Anonymous Atheist's Custom Keyboard

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It is often the case that the same key is stuck.

Two Naturally Occurring By-Products in Mid-debate

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“Burden” is intentionally spelled “Burton”. Reference The Garbage Pail Kids.

The Alien Gospel

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Discussion Questions

1) Is either the existence of extraterrestrial life or belief in it unbiblical?

2) If they are real, are extraterrestrials from other planets or other dimensions?

3) In light of the limited amount of verified information we have about extraterrestrial entities, are they really benevolent? Why or why not?

4) Does the Bible appear to predict an intimate and widespread encounter with extraterrestials? (Revelation chapter 9 and 12) And could the events described in Revelation (chapters 9 and 12) be misinterpreted as the second coming of Christ?

5) If they are real, are aliens actually demons?

6) Aside from them being a side effect of prolonged drug use, what other explanations are there for legitimate, unexplained extraterrestrial sightings and encounters?

7) What explanation can account for the mass of reported alien messages that are evolution-tinged and heavily anti-theistic?

Never forget that alien begins with “a lie”!

Timepiece
Written by Ben Avery
Illustrated by Sherwin Schwartzrock, Darren Brady, David McConnehey, Jennifer King, Jesse Hamm, Wil Hartman, Brian Proctor, Amy Robbins, Jerry Welch, Monte Wilson and Dave Zimmerman
28 pages (May 2002)
ISBN: COMM-00005

Synopsis

After a drunk driver killed his wife, Doug Lee is given a mysterious watch that seems to have a miraculous power — the power to move him back in time. Is this the chance he’s been waiting for? A chance to go back and save his wife? Or could he do more and change the course of time by stopping history’s greatest evils? Doug is about to find out that using the watch has life threatening — and life changing — consequences.

Comics are a personal favorite reading material for me. I’ve been reading, drawing, and writing them since I was a kid. The neat afffect of having people roll their eyes and walk around you at the bookstore is also an added bonus. (NOTE: This doesn’t happen in the Far East, an environment where many adults still read comics regularly.) It’s also funny to hear my dear mom still refer to them as “funny books”. Sadly, humor and fun are rare therein. In fact, “garbage” is the only noun that I can incorporate as an adjective to describe them. Comics used to be graded “mature” when they contained nudity, profanity, and so on. Now just about every comic is like that, as if drawing someone naked or composing a story of mostly profanity is “cutting edge” or “daring”. It’s not. It’s old and boring; anybody can do it. What takes real creativity and maturity is to create a comic without any of them.

And that’s where Timepiece comes in.

A few years ago, I had been on a no-comics diet, thinking that I had outgrown the medium. I ordered this comic along with some other things from the group over at the short-lived-yet-fresh the Megazeen, a Christian comic periodical that was so underground that it’s not even bootlegged in China. (I had the pleasure of doing some short comics for them and met some really talented Christian comic book writers and artists there.) They seemed to have been doing some awesomely controversial, yet thought-provoking things from what I saw online (like Tom Hall’s “Tales from the Womb”, which I think still generates hate mail in bulk).

I opened up a package and read Timepiece. It just blew me away.

The Story

I’m not one for dropping spoilers, so I’m not going to detail that here. Let me just say this in all sincerity: I hadn’t read a comic that actually made me want to read it again until I read Timepiece. That is the biggest and best compliment I could pay to a comic author and I think it goes far in showcasing the writing talent of Ben Avery.

The Art

There were a whole batch of artists involved in Timepiece. Since I know a little of the conditions that went into its production, I’ll go a little easier on them.

The art varies from “barely acceptable”, to “obviously rushed” (Jesse Hamm, who usually does stellar work), and then onward to “plain awesome” (Sherwin Schwartzrock, an artist whose work I would say is Marvel-caliber were I to not consider that an insult to his skill level). While some styles don’t really work to tell the story clearly, other styles really make Ben Avery’s strong story just that much stronger.

I can remember sitting and contemplating the entire story after reading it, something that actually happens after each time I read it. And speaking as an artist myself, Timepiece fulfills that entire purpose of art to the full. What is that purpose? Not personal expression, as we’ve been deluded to think is the purpose of art, but communication. It communicated. It pushers the reader to think of things that are deeper than just a story in a comic book. It made me think and made me want to consider our own place in this vast creation and history.

Well done, Ben Avery and Community Comics.

Buy Timepiece here: http://zombieammo.com/CommunityComics/comics_timep.html (real copy just $3.00USD)

Or here: http://www.wowio.com/users/product.asp?BookId=3908 (eBook just $0.99USD!)

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