Back on Track

New reviews coming soon! I'll be importing my work from the past two years, but in the meantime,
I'm reclaiming my small place on the web.

Wednesday, July 20, 2005

Christian Fiction Review

The Journey
by Arnita C. Wright
ISBN-10: 1597813265
Review by Heather Froeschl

In "The Journey" Arnita Wright leads readers through the lives of a family and shares what she believes is a heavenly message. The story revolves around two women and eventually leads to a scroll and a command from on high to spread the word.

Janice begins this journey with a heart attack and is hospitalized. There her daughter, Karen, having rushed to be by her side, had an accident in the parking lot and ends up being admitted for a slight concussion. The two lapse into comas, confounding doctors and worrying their family. But these comas are caused by God and the purpose is to take Janice to heaven and allow her to watch as Karen is reminded of the awesome Christian God she has begun to lose faith in.

Karen is shown, through time travel and angel power, moments of her mother's life in which God's intervention and the power of prayer saved her many times over. She bears witness to moments when prayer saved her father's life as well, and eventually, even her own. Through it all Karen is guided by angels who are able to intervene in the goings on, while Karen of course, cannot. Will she learn from all of these glimpses into the past? Will she become a messenger for God?

Everything comes under attack in this book. This is one all-inclusive piece of propaganda. Readers are shown that good Christian children who pray and are prayed for will be protected from child molesters. We are told that teachers who instill children to have open minds by exploring other cultures are into evil doings. The author even states that a war against religion, Christianity specifically, began in the 1950's and everything people did that was outside of Christianity was in fact against it. (It couldn't be that all American's right to freedom of religion, all religion, not just Christianity, was being protected?)

In "The Journey," demons, like Discouragement, Disillusion and Lust are unlocked and invited into lives through books, games and television shows. Yoga and meditation are also invitations for evil to enter into lives and homes. Abortion is touched on in a self righteous way and stillbirth is explained as a blessing. But those who pray and are prayed for, to the Christian God, are protected, insinuating that those who aren't Christian are not protected. Arnita Wright seems to have an opinion on everything and her work of fiction "creatively altered (of) her own personal journey" reeks of just another attempt at "salvation" and conversion of non-Christians.

Clearly this isn't just a work of fiction but is a slap in the face to non-christian readers, with a pretty face promising to pray for them.

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