Your Daily Moment of WTF?
Jun. 17th, 2005 01:36 amNear where I work, there's a large Family Chrisitan Bookstores. I've not been in it, because I work at a bookstore. But it's on the way I walk from work to a deli a couple stores down from the FCB. So I get to walk past and look at the displays, most of which are generally generic retail displays, with more religious overtones. Which is what they sell, so duh.
But there's this one thing displayed in the window, that makes me go WTF?
It's a replica Crown of Thorns. For $49.95. 12" across.
Double-ewe Tee Eff? No, seriously. Why? What are you going to do with it, wear it for Jesus cosplay? Or is there a larger faction (sect?) out there that fetishizes the pain and suffering and death part of Jesus's story over the "Love, Peace, and Don't be a Dick" parts? You know how sometimes asking the question will give you the answer, especially when Mel Gibson made a big "Pain and Suffering!" flick recently? Yeah.
Still. It's creepy, on so many levels.
Tags: Mindscribbles, Religion
But there's this one thing displayed in the window, that makes me go WTF?
It's a replica Crown of Thorns. For $49.95. 12" across.
Double-ewe Tee Eff? No, seriously. Why? What are you going to do with it, wear it for Jesus cosplay? Or is there a larger faction (sect?) out there that fetishizes the pain and suffering and death part of Jesus's story over the "Love, Peace, and Don't be a Dick" parts? You know how sometimes asking the question will give you the answer, especially when Mel Gibson made a big "Pain and Suffering!" flick recently? Yeah.
Still. It's creepy, on so many levels.
Tags: Mindscribbles, Religion
no subject
Date: 2005-06-17 08:15 am (UTC)However, I think a large part of the WTF? factor is context. Something like that in a church or pastor's office is one thing (and still slightly weird, to me, but), having a display of 4 set up in a big window of a store in a strip mall, right between Veggie-Tales and little pewter angels is different. Yes, obviously, such things must be made, sold, and shipped for churches to have them, on the mundane level. I think it's the combination of commercialism and that it's displayed right in the big window, plus what it is, that makes it so amazingly WTF?-worthy.
And not everybody looks at it the same way you do, especially in more fundamentalist circiles. Who almost have to be the "core" audience of any kind of Christian Bookstore, I'd think, the same way a comic store targets comic geeks, or so on. But I don't know their internal workings, and I know that most businesses have important core groups, but also make > 50% of their money from "random" people. Usually quite a bit more, even for niche businesses.
Also, this is unrelated, I still find it kinda odd so many of the crucifixes in churches have a Jesus on them that's paler than I am. And scrawny. Carpenter, living in the middle east.