Spoiler Alert!
(Just
kidding, I know I was the last one on the planet to see the movie, so there's
no one left to be spoiled.)
To
Angie's delight, Frozen finally came in the mail from Netflix. Don't worry, we
didn't deprive her of the most popular thing since the Rainbow Loom for six
whole months, she'd already seen it twice. I, on the other hand, had only heard
some mediocre reviews from parents driven mad by the wild obsession
over some ice princess, and of course I'd been subjected to countless parodies
of the soundtrack on Facebook.
From
the opening scene, I found the animation lacking compared to Pixar's beauties
and even some of Disney's others such as Tangled, I was underwhelmed by the
jokes, annoyed by the songs, and finding the whole storyline predictable. As I
really listened to the most memorized and belted out song by kids in years,
"Let it Go," I started to worry about the message mistakenly
taken to heart by zillions of children:
It’s time to see what I can do
To test the limits and break through
No right, no wrong, no rules for me
To test the limits and break through
No right, no wrong, no rules for me
Yes,
those are exactly the words every parent wants stuck in their child's head!
But
then Olaf appeared and the humor level rose a few notches. The love story I
assumed would play out, did not come to the happily ever after double wedding
end I'd naively predicted. And then I started to see Jesus all over the place...
The
parenting book Give Them Grace has a thought-provoking chapter about pop
culture and how to raise your little ones in this big scary world without
confining them to a bubble or at the other extreme exposing them entirely to
the unfiltered trash that pervades our media today. I love that instead of
burning the books, movies, and music your kids friends will surely be talking
about, they recommend you start looking with your kids for the one Good Story.
"We want our children to know and
believe the one good story. Every other story is a copy or a shadow of
this... We want our kids to know the one good story so well that when they
see secular characters they can recognize the strands of truth and deception in
them. We want them to be able to recognize the great themes of the gospel:
sacrificial love, the laying down of our life for our enemies... We want them
to identify forgiveness, justice, redemption, and the fight against
evil..."
I'm
a total sucker for this. I saw Christ in almost every selfless loving move of
Peeta from the Hunger Games as well as Harry Potter. And then I was suddenly so sure
Olaf was going to be the next Jesus figure, sitting by the fireplace when he explained love as putting someone
else's needs before your own. When he said "Some people are worth melting
for," I had to wipe away some tears before Angie caught me sniffling. But
again I misjudged Disney, Olaf did not give his life as the true love act Anna
needed.
I
was so pleasantly surprised by the twist when Anna herself performed the act
she was waiting for, the final of many Gospel themes throughout the movie.
You
see, the Bible story was first hinted at when Elsa sang the chorus, "Be
the good girl you've always had to be." And then it was played out as she
realized she could not live up to the rules that had confined her for so long.
In a classic Old Testament storyline, her character lived riddled with fear and
guilt as she tried to live up to the impossible standards of the Law, until she
finally came to understand just how futile that is.
The
turning point/hit song, "Let it Go" was Elsa's chorus of
freedom from the chains of obedience that enslaved her. She let her hair down
and took off the gloves in a symbolic gesture of leaving the Law behind.
Unfortunately, she recognized the Old Covenant was more than she could fulfill
before she learned the good news. So, she was left to wander alone in the
wilderness for some time before the one who had been pursuing her with
unrequited, unconditional love all along, her sister Anna, made the ultimate sacrifice for her. Finally,
the true love act of one for another set Elsa free, free to live in the New
Covenant of grace and love.
Anna's
sacrifice for one who had done nothing but hurt her for as long as she could
remember was further allegory that forgiveness heals the heart of the forgiver
as much as the forgiven. And we mustn't forget the trolls' insightful number Fixer Upper, full of the lyrics
our kids should be memorizing; detailing how everyone needs community, that
none of us is really any better than anyone else, and that it's loving each
other that polishes our imperfect edges.
Thank
you Disney, for giving us a movie our kids want to watch ad nauseam, that we
parents can use for some teachable moments, and be reminded of a few important
lessons ourselves. Now, if you could just clarify to the children that they
don't need to test our limits and scream "No right, no wrong, no rules for
me," in order to be set free, they just have to know the love of their
Savior...
"But
now that we’re no longer shackled to that domineering mate of sin, and out from
under all those oppressive regulations and fine print, we’re free to live a new
life in the freedom of God." -Romans 7:6 TM
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