Logo

 

Banner Image:   Baptist-Times-banner-2000x370-
Template Mode:   Baptist Times
Icon
    Post     Tweet


Where the sacred and scary meet 


Is God really in the unexpected places …like horror films? By Peter Laws

 
 
EyesAuthor Lint Hatcher says that some people have ‘The Spooky Gene’. For whatever reason they’re fascinated with the creepier side of life. Maybe it’s scary movies, the paranormal or gritty crime fiction. You’ll see it at the Tower of London when the crowd perks up just as the guide gets to the grisly bits.
  
As a Baptist minister it’s fascinating spotting who has this gene and who doesn’t. Like the kindly, flower-arranging pensioner who leans in closer during a reading of the tent peg scene in Judges.

Or the mum in the Parent and Toddler group whose eyes glaze over when I talk about church but who sparkles if someone mentions a haunted house.

And then there’s me, who has a long-term case of the spooky gene: a love of horror films (which, incidentally, doesn’t always mean gory or violent) and a fascination with the paranormal. When I became a Christian I was told to bury such freaky interests - which I did - until my Master’s Thesis on Religion in Horror got me wondering: what if God might be found in the really unexpected places.

So I took a leave of absence from the pastorate.  And while I still preach lots of non-horror sermons in various churches, I now have time to explore where the scary and the sacred meet. I write a monthly column for the secular print magazine The Fortean Times. I present a horror theology podcast called The Flicks That Church Forgot.  I’ve written a scary, theological thriller novel which my agent is currently pitching.

And I receive regular emails from the thousands of often unchurched people who read or listen to my reviews worldwide. Sometimes when I attend horror press screenings in London, fellow critics spit out their drink when they spot the word Rev on my twitter handle. But then they ask for my email address. ‘What do you believe, then?’ 

It’s controversial of course. I get that. To those without the spooky gene it’s nonsensical, dangerous even. Better to watch Toy Story 3. Good for them. But what about the millions who are drawn to this stuff, some of whom are in your church, attending your Alpha courses? Do we write them off, tell them to change their personalities? Especially when horror is one of the few genres to take the supernatural and objective evil seriously?

Case in point: The Exorcist (1974). William Friedkin’s box office phenomenon terrified audiences and repulsed many Christians, who struggled to find any merit in watching a tale of a young girl possessed by the devil. Being a little too young to have caught it in cinema (I was six months old) I eventually tracked down a copy in the late 80s. As an unchurched teenager I remember feeling something like a spiritual charge slipping the tape in and bracing myself.

Because it wasn’t the gore or spectacle that was making my heart race, but the unashamed presentation of a life changing idea: that maybe there really is such a thing as objective good and evil. Yes there was blasphemy (hardly surprising given the subject) but it was one of the few films I can think of where the priests were the heroes. In this, the devil wasn’t some enticing, figure of liberation but a horrifying hate-filled juggernaut. Some might call it an evil film, but all I can say is that I’ve met several Christians whose spiritual journeys began with it.

Some of you reading this will be shaking your head. Yet, others wonder if God’s fingerprints might be found in the unexpected areas of culture. Where wider really means wider.  Beyond the reaches of what we previously thought. I’m not evangelical about horror. If you don’t have the spooky gene, then avoid it. It’ll only creep you out; give you nightmares.

But those who do have it are often like I was: searching for spiritual answers in a disenchanted world that insists there is nothing beyond the physical. Bizarrely horror movies said something different and I think growing up, they set me on the path to God.

These days I’m discovering what I always suspected: I’m not the only one.


Photo: istockphoto.com
 

The Revd Peter Laws is an accredited Baptist minister currently on Leave of Absence and working as a freelance writer and speaker. To read more from Peter visit www.peterlaws.co.uk. He tweets from @revpeterlaws



This article appears in the Summer 2014 edition of Baptists Together Magazine


 
Baptist Times, 26/04/2014
    Post     Tweet
Ministry on mission: thriving as a part-time pastor in a full-time world
Sam Ackerman shares his calling to and advocacy for part-time ministry. Sam is the part-time minister of Horndean Baptist Church, Waterlooville, and also works in the local junior school
smchstory
AI, TikTok - how do we equip our children to make good choices?
Technology is advancing at such a speed that we sometimes struggle to navigate each new turn, writes Katharine Hill. So how do we equip our children to deal with the dangers, as well as to take hold of the opportunities?
The imaginative, poetic, astonishing scholar Walter Brueggemann
Walter Brueggemann, who has died aged 92, was the most influential Old Testament scholar over several generations, writes Andy Goodliff
Everyone Everywhere: a conversation with Alan Hirsch
Alex Harris reflects on a day inviting practitioners, planters, imaginers and leaders to think about how to create greater movement in sharing Jesus and starting churches
'Does this serve Jesus and his kingdom first?'
With input from Alan Hirsch, the latest Everyone Everywhere national conference explored missional togetherness, and how we become less institutional and more movement-oriented. Simon Hall offers this reflection
Navigating cultural landscapes: lessons from a reverse missionary
Mutual learning is central to bridging cultures, involving a two-way exchange where both parties bring their unique perspectives and insights to the table, writes Henry C. Ohakah, minister, Mountsorrel Baptist Church
     The Baptist Times 
    Posted: 08/05/2025
    Posted: 25/04/2025
    Posted: 11/04/2025
    Posted: 11/02/2025
    Posted: 03/02/2025
    Posted: 27/01/2025
    Posted: 18/12/2024
    Posted: 11/12/2024
    Posted: 28/11/2024
    Posted: 18/11/2024
    Posted: 14/10/2024
    Posted: 02/10/2024
     
    Text Size:  
    Small (Default)
    Medium
    Large
    Contrast:  
    Normal
    High Contrast