Postby rocklobster » Thu May 07, 2009 9:09 am
[quote="Lengai (post: 1301787)"]
This is my response to the above-mentioned article.
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Let's give this another go. I became a Christian when I was eight years old, in 1999. I'm a high school senior currently. I love God and I love his Word. Christianity is about love, you know. You know what else I am? I'm an Animorphs fan. It was my favorite book to read as a kid. I ate it up, and I still go back and read my fairly big collection of said series. And I have not been negatively influenced by the content of these books. They have not hindered my Christian walk, even as I have been reading them for over ten years. But, in case that testimony isn't enough, I'm going to tear down this 'article'.
"I read all but the last four books. However, I did read the book Miss Applegate wrote about the Ellimist and Crayak. The beginning of this book starts out with the Ellimist talking to a dying Animorph. The story makes it seem like the Ellimist is almost afraid of Crayak. The Ellimist starts out as a humanoid creature who is sent out on a journey when his planet is destroyed. Through a series of adventures the Ellimist is transformed into a god-like creature. (It definitely sounds like some of the New-age beliefs to me. I believe that even the Mormon church believes that.)"
Okay, this is true. But you HAVE to keep in mind that these are ALIENS. They are not real, this is science fiction, and every kid who picks the book up knows it. While some kids practice magic because of books, no one really believes in the aliens as depicted in Animorphs. The Ellimist and Crayak may correlate some in their characteristics to deities, but they are STILL aliens and FICTIONAL. And I disagree with the assumed connection - the Ellimist sounds like a being that went through an experience similar to that of Gautama Buddha, not particularly New-Age, even though I can see why one would try to think of it as transcendental meditation. Even though this is still a false concept, the Ellimist relates more to Buddhism than Satanism, what your site is apparently dedicated to 'exposing'. Even so, we're working with fiction, and I personally never was influenced by the nature of the Ellimist and Crayak. I did disagree with their natures, mind you, even as a child. But I knew they were written as aliens, and that this was NOT to be taken as Truth.
[I]"At the end of this book, the Ellimist tells the dying Animorph that, although he supposedly loves life and can save her, he will not. Her “soulâ€