28 November 2007
Willy Wonka and the Church Factory, Part 2
There are some unbelievable similarities between the characters in Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory and a lot of folks caught up in “Church hopping and shopping” these days. For a little background check out yesterday’s post here. For today however, let’s pick up where we left off.
First there was the rotund, Augustus Gloop, who represents the never satisfied consumer. He ate everything in sight, but it was never enough. He also, NEVER even considered giving any to the other kids or even his parent. He’s similar to the church goer who takes, takes, takes yet never serves or even participates in giving back to God. Augustus was repulsed by the less sweet candies like some church consumers are repulsed by the offering and non-environmentalists are repulsed by planting a tree. No, I’m not a tree hugger, but I don’t think we need to shred the environment either!
Then there was the rich brat, Veruca Salt. She was used to calling the shots. She apparently got everything she ever asked for at home and if you ever denied her, the Salty wrath of Veruca was sure to follow. She reminds me of lay people who like enough about a church to stay, but not enough to get on board with the vision. These people are great as long as you are doing church exactly the way they think it should be done. However, step out of line with their personal vision for _____________ (insert church name here) Church and all heck breaks loose. Consider yourself warned. You’ve been Verucad!
Next, there was, Violet Beauregarde. She was the one who always had to look perfect. For her, life was a fashion show and the visit to the Chocolate Factory was her own personal trip down the runway.
Where I live, church is a socially popular thing to do. It’s a great place to make business contacts, catch up on the latest gossip, show folks you’re losing weight, add to your resume as a good guy or gal, etc. BUT…get to serious or biblical and people might think you’re a Jesus Freak and that would spoil everything!
And we can’t have that.
Are we done yet?
No.
Next we have, Mike Teavee, a surly, spoiled video-game player. He’s the “competitive Christian.” For him the church is a chance to relive the glory days of high-school and dominate the softball league—or, the annual golf tournament, or the basketball, or…whatever. The church in this case is more of a YMCA.
And finally, there was our young hero, the unassuming Charlie Bucket.
Where does he fit?
He’s the one Christ puts His greatest hope in. He’s not there for the fashion show, or to play games, or to catch up on gossip, or judge, or hijack the vision. He’s there for just the right reasons.
Is he perfect?
No. Haven’t you been listening?
He’s far from it, but he’s perfect for the church.
Tomorrow I’ll tell you why.
Or, you could rent Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory and see for yourself.
Your call.
6 Comments currently posted.
JT says:
Sue L. says:
Hi Rob,
I love Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (I prefer the latest one too with Johnny Depp), so I am pretty familiar with the movie. I am going to take a guess as to why Charlie is perfect for the church and God puts his best hope into someone like him… is it because he is loyal, practical and a truth seeker? Charlie doesn’t care about all the other stuff, to him family (and things of the heart) are most important.
Anyway, look forward to tomorrow’s post!
Sue
P.S. I had to check out the celebrity look-a-like too–kinda fun!
Alan Abbott says:
Great post and great parallels..would that make the First Impression team the Oompa Loompas????
Nathan Ketsdever says:
Great post, story and analogy!
Kati says:
once again =D GREAT!
[there is a book too!]
Elizabeth says:
oompa oompa doopit i do, I’ve got the perfect puzzle for you!!! Sure Oompa Loompa’s great cast of little Green Men… we fit right in!!
Look forward to tomorrow’s post.



















Nice job on these last couple of posts…(although I have to admit I did the celebrity look-a-like thing too!).
Isn’t it amazing how many spiritual applications there are in movies? Facing the Giants series was a good example of how the movie clips really tied in the points that you were making in the message. Why don’t you use more movie clips? Just an idea