Consequently, over the last few months, we’ve been (selectively) working our way through the MCU.
At least I have been with my youngest.
My eldest, who wanted to watch the films more, has barely been able to sit through an entire film.
The reason is simple, and in part, is the reason she wanted to watch the movies in the first place.
She’s seen the shorts online.
She’s viewed small snippets of the best bits.
She’s been exposed to the most action-packed, humour-quipped, tear-jerking moments.
But, she cannot stomach the plot which connects these fragments.
She isn’t prepared to put in the effort to get the underlying plot which adds the meaning.
Do we consume the bible in the same way?
Do we just expose ourselves to the greatest hits?
Are we just familiar with the Sunday shorts?
When we’re younger, this is definitely the way we serve up the scriptures.
Bite-sized.
Easily-consumable.
Hopefully, alongside a story which has a drama or a craft activity.
But, we exclude some of the passages which add depth to these passages.
We cut Deuteronomy.
We skim over Isaiah and Jeremiah.
We leave Romans for “when they’re older”.
But, in doing this, we reduce the bible to a series of disconnected shorts.
We rob the bible of an overarching salvation narrative.
Worse still, we condition our young people to only be able to consume the bible in easily-digestible chunks.
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