tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3613036811186877822.post5304456902095712495..comments2024-01-19T12:21:19.626-08:00Comments on Stable Of Zionist Hores: "Moral Orel", Cartoon Network's Assault On MohammedStable Handhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14669578229942393254noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3613036811186877822.post-48898569241753838622010-02-18T09:37:41.665-08:002010-02-18T09:37:41.665-08:00The show's main premise is of Orel's innoc...The show's main premise is of Orel's innocence and good nature constantly pointing to true moral north, until it is perverted by his elders and their poor interpretation of what Christianity should be. The longest running joke of the show, Clay's "65 Lost 10 Commandments", are the best example of this. They speak on matters promoting racism, xenophobia, and excessive prudishness that do not appear in The Bible, but are seen far too often in the "Christian" culture found in 1950's to present day America.<br /><br />The show Moral Orel does not speak against Christianity in general or good Christians, just to the perversion of the Word that has developed in our culture. The creator of the show even offers his interpretation of the finale as God's message to Orel that his life will get better. Yes, many points of the show feature blasphemy as shock value, but this is to point out the flaws in the people, not Christianity itself.sbf2009noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3613036811186877822.post-58223484900561243662010-02-14T15:01:55.040-08:002010-02-14T15:01:55.040-08:00The episode in question is a little more layered a...The episode in question is a little more layered and complex than you make it out to be. In it, the song is written for a school pageant about Jesus and Judas. Judas, the villain, sings the song about hating Jesus. It's obvious in the episode that the play is written by an angry man who doesn't understand the story of the Passion. But, since it's such a catchy tune, everyone who sees it ends up humming and singing the liveliest song. You see, the town is seduced into saying something they don't believe because the "media" (the school play) has presented something repugnant in a slick and seductive manner. They are distracted from the message of the Passion by the bells and whistles of an entertaining villain, Judas. The episode is not about hatng Jesus. Far from it. It's about how we can lose sight of The Way when we just see things for there surface, shallow, immediate value.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com