In the 1960s, Stan Lee and Jack Kirby began creating comic book storylines that were interconnected in a shared universe and told a single story through many individual stories. In the early twenty-first century, that's what Marvel Studios decided to do through the films that became the Marvel Cinematic Universe. The first of these films was released in 2008. Now—eleven years and twenty-two films later—all of these storylines have culminated in a single film, Avengers: Endgame. In this special episode of Three Chords and the Truth, Garrick Bailey and Timothy Paul Jones take a careful look at Avengers: Endgame. The resulting discussion covers everything from humanity's inescapable yearning for a metanarrative to the philosophical foundations that undergird the ethics of Iron Man, Captain America, and Thor. A bizarre link between the Infinity Gauntlet and the bones of the sixteenth-century nun Teresa de Jesus also makes an appearance. This week's question from the Infinity Gauntlet pits Sting—the elven blade borne by Bilbo and Frodo—against Mjolnir, the mythical hammer carried by Thor.
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Questions to Discuss1. What does the popularity of the Marvel Cinematic Universe tell us about ourselves and about the stories we tell?
2. How specifically does Avengers: Endgame elicit an awareness of the goodness of God’s creation?
3. In this film, what is it that’s broken and fallen that the heroes are seeking to repair?
4. How does Avengers: Endgame intersect with a biblical understanding of redemption?
5. Are there any places in Avengers: Endgame that we glimpse fragments of God’s truth about the end of time?
Links to ClickB and H Academic
"Spidey Meets the Prankster": from the 1974-1977 feature on the PBS program The Electric Company
Superheroes Can’t Save You: book by Todd Miles
After Virtue: book by Alasdair MacIntyre
The Inklings: book by Humphrey Carpenter
A Secular Age: book by Charles Taylor
Reformed Dogmatics: Volume 4: Holy Spirit, Church, and New Creation: book by Herman Bavinck
How (Not) to Be Secular: book by James K.A. Smith
Our Secular Age: book edited by Collin Hansen
"A Super Group Takes the Screen": article by Tom Russo
"Kissing the Hand of Saint Teresa in Ronda": article with photographs about the reliquary for the hand of Teresa of Avila
"Comic-Book Superheroes in a Christian Worldview": article by Timothy Paul Jones
Avengers: Endgame: music by Alan Silvestri
Encomia: song by Encomia
ThreeChordsApologetics.com
If you are interested in earning a master’s degree online or on campus that will equip you with the most comprehensive apologetics training available anywhere, go to http://www.sbts.edu/bgs/degree-programs/mdiv/apologetics/
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The Closing CreditsThree Chords and the Truth: The Apologetics Podcast thanks B&H Academic for their sponsorship. Music for the podcast has been licensed through Artlist.io and performed by the band Vegan Friendly—even though neither Garrick nor Timothy has ever been vegan friendly. Brief excerpts of music played in this program are included solely for the purposes of comment and critique as allowed under the fair-use provision of U.S. copyright law. "The fair use of a copyrighted work ... for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, ... scholarship, or research, is not an infringement of copyright" (U.S. Code § 107, Limitations on exclusive rights: Fair use).
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