uc pseudonym wrote:Well, at the very least you can give thanks that your situation could be far worse.
I agree with GhostontheNet, but I am personally still set on Old Testament stories being brought to an animated form due to generally higher levels of action. Ideologically, I would go with the New Testament.
Thank you, I'm glad to see someone takes my ideas seriously. I also agree that the Old Testament stories would go through a good conversion to an animated format, but I really do think the addition of external sources would not only provide the context, but also would add some of the "action". Take for example, Acts 21:38 which follows Paul's trip to Jerusalem and the ensuing riot, where a tribune saves his life. And lacking the historical context, the tribune drops a curious comment]The Jewish War[/U] 2.13.2-2.13.6. Here, he tells about how when Felix is procurator he manages to very effectively to suppress insurrectionists in Judea. However, another kind pops up called the Sicarii, who manage extremely effective assasinations that are literally cloak and dagger, he goes on to note that they aroused such fear that you had "every man hourly expecting death, as in war." He also went on to note the arisal of militant false messiahs and false prophets, who also are often nailed by Felix's armies. He then discusses a particularly disasterous "Egyptian false prophet", "a fraud who posed as a seer" who collected "30,000 dupes" (not a problem for biblical innerancy because most scholars admit Luke's 4,000 is more likely) who leads them from "the desert" to the Mount of Olives. Unfortunately for him, the procurator Festus meets him with his armies, and in the ensuing clash many people are killed while the Egyptian false prophet ensues a particularly cowardly retreat. Little wonder our tribune thought Paul was the Egyptian, as his resurfacing after this incident would certainly not be well recieved. Not only would this add action and the historical context, but it would also suit Luke's rhetorical purposes quite well when he had previously quoted the testimony of the famed Rabbi Gamaliel that if this movement is not sent by God, it will come to nothing like several previous messianic movements, but if they oppose what is sent by God there will be no destroying it (Acts 5:34-39). That is, all the time now the premise is being proven true that false messiahs and false prophets are coming to naught, but the Christian movement isn't, proving it's divine backing to the previous believer in
YHWH. And again, these are only examples of my concept in action.