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Science Fiction . . .

and Our Brokenness

Science Fiction, faith, doubt, atheists, technology, writing fiction

 

I know a lot of people who don’t like fiction in general, and some who don’t like science fiction (SciFi) in particular.

 

I’ve heard the genre of SciFi scorned as cold, escapist, and downright evil.  Personally, however, I have found that many SciFi stories are compelling studies on the brokenness of humanity, the ways we try to fix ourselves . . . and how we all somehow know deep inside that it will take something greater than us to set us free.

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Science fiction is actually a study in irony

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“Science” fiction is often the turf of atheists and others who declare that humanity (given sufficient time and technology) can build/think/formulize its way out of any problem.  AND YET it’s also a genre which demonstrates the limitless ways we are broken and how our technology might be used to enslave or destroy all of us. While appealing to our desire to find immortality . . . SciFi repeatedly demonstrates the dreadfulness of a fractured personality that might live forever.

 

And think of it.  Nearly all science fiction stories have a “spiritual” element, a faith or belief in some unverifiable, un-provable (unscientific) thing that is ultimately necessary to save the characters from their worst-case scenario (as in Star Wars).  Adding to the irony is that all the best-loved SciFi stories involve robots, androids, or aliens from other worlds that desire to be human—with all the emotion and fragility that entails (I Robot and Star Trek would be classic examples).  Those who eschew the “illogical” nature of human emotions and spirituality will feast on SciFi stories that show us the horrors of an existence devoid of these things.

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In short, SciFi continually shows us the scars of man’s imperfections and limitations, yet recognizes that there is something ultimately valuable in the midst of our humanness.

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Methinks that many of the crusty science fiction lovers out there are inwardly longing to escape humanity’s ills and to touch eternity—and they somehow know that human solutions won’t be the answer, that there is something beyond nature or what we can touch, calculate, and prove.  As far as I am concerned, that’s a great place to start a journey.

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[Jesus was . . .] Calling the crowd to join his disciples, he said, “Anyone who intends to come with me has to let me lead. You’re not in the driver’s seat; I am. . . . Self-help is no help at all. . . . What good would it do to get everything you want and lose you, the real you? What could you ever trade your soul for?”  Mark 8:35-37  The Message

 

God chose the foolish things of the world to shame the wise; God chose the weak things of the world to shame the strong. God chose the lowly things of this world and the despised things—and the things that are not—to nullify the things that are, so that no one may boast before him.  1 Corinthians 1:28-29 NIV

 

I'm hoping that more Christian authors and readers will grasp the idea that the genre of Science Fiction can actually be a great vehicle for transmitting spiritual truth.

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Terry's SciFi books:  Gatekeeper, Sojourner, Swordsman, Scions of the Aegean C, Through the Land of Cloud and Leaf , Under an Open Sky

Another article about SciFi: What is Steampunk?


An article about Fiction in general:  Telling the Truth, through Fiction

 

(The majority of this article was taken from the blog of Terry L. Craig--used with permission.)

© 2013 Terry L. Craig

 

Online you can find Terry:  On her About page, on her website, on Facebook, MeWe, Gab, & STORYROCKET
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Apocalyptic Fiction
The Fellowship of the Mystery trilogy portrays men and women attempting to navigate through a world that is increasingly possessed by the hypocrisies of political correctness and relativistic truth. Written with rich characters and detailed settings with a plotline that revolves around the most important question of any time: Who is Jesus Christ? 
 
This End Times series isn't about when Christians will leave, but how they will livegiving both Christians and non-Christians a view of:  

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GATEKEEPER,
SOJOURNER,
& SWORDSMAN
by Terry L. Craig

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Read the Within the Walls trilogy

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Emilya is an Associate VP at her company, a research & development whiz, and the inventor of a micro-computer owned by 98% of the world's remaining populace. It's 2071 and things like physical touch, the need for face to face relationships, and concepts such as church are long gone. Fortified only with micro-sleep and protein bars, she created virtual vacations, and never thought much about what it would be like to have more ... but the discovery of a letter in a black metal box hidden in her attic will cause her to re-think it all... Add the Within the Walls Trilogy by Stephanie Bennett to your reading list.

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Futuristic fiction . . . with a spiritual edge.

Within the Walls
Breaking the Silence
The Poet's Treasure
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Scions of the Aegean C
by Terry L. Craig
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An epic narrative of love, choices, and God's ability to redeem.
 

Adventure and danger with a fine love story
Genres: 

Christian Fiction > Romance,

Christian SciFi > Steampunk

For Ages 16 and up

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