Religion News Service
   
Megachurch drama coming to your  TV
_Laura  Turner_ (http://lauraturner.religionnews.com/author/lauraturner/)  
| Jan 17,  2014 
 
 
The lives of the faithful have increasingly become fodder for reality  
television. See Lifetime’s short-lived _Preacher’s Wives_ 
(http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/01/31/preacher-wives-tlc-orders_n_1244498.html)
 ; Oxygen’s 
_Preachers of  LA_ (http://preachers-of-la.oxygen.com/)  (Tagline: “Living the 
God Life”); and _Preacher’s Daughters,_ 
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Preachers'_Daughters)  which follows three 
teenage  girls navigating the 
travails that befall those unfortunate creatures born to  pastors. As churches 
grow 
in size and cultural influence, they can also become  good (or poor) 
entertainment. 
Now, NBC _has ordered the pilot of a drama_ 
(http://www.avclub.com/article/creator-of-camp-and-mercy-working-on-megachurch-dr-107032?utm_source=Twitter&;
utm_medium=SocialMarketing&utm_campaign=Default:1:Default)  from Liz 
Heldens, creator of  such TV shows as Camp and Mercy. This  show, Salvation 
(not 
to be confused with Snake:  Salvation, Terminator Salvation, or “Supernatural”
  Salvation) takes place at a Texas megachurch and ”will delve into  “
faith, family and corruption,’ revolving around a lead character whose husband  
dies under mysterious circumstances.” 
_Thewrap.com_ (http://www.thewrap.com/nbc-david-janollari-pilot-salvation)  
reports that the show’s producer will be David  Janollari, the producer of 
Six Feet Under, who will surely bring  some life-and-death drama from that 
show to this. One interesting detail is the  name of the main character: 
Jennifer Strickland will be the central figure  in Salvation, according to 
thewrap.com and other sources — a woman  “who has to defend her children, 
church 
and religious beliefs after her husband  dies under mysterious 
circumstances.” 
A quick Google result of the name yields another _Jennifer Strickland_ 
(http://www.jenniferstrickland.net/) ,  also a Christian and a former fashion 
model who now speaks to young women across  America about how destructive the 
modeling world was and how to turn to God to  recognize their real beauty. 
Strickland aside, I’m curious to see how the show will fare. I doubt I’ll 
be  watching, and I bristle at the suggestion that megachurch politics 
(which  certainly exist) might lead to physical harm or death. Megachurches, 
which  absolutely face difficult issues of power and ego on their own, are not 
quite  the halls of power of Congress or the Pentagon. So the “corruption” 
the show’s  writers speak about will be interesting to watch unfold. I mean, 
we Christians  may be a terminally nice lot who avoid confrontation and 
leave  passive-aggressive voicemails for each other, but it will take some 
seriously  skillful (or manipulative) storytelling to pull off a television 
show 
like  this. 
Then again, maybe Reformed pastor John Piper meant something else when he  
famously tweeted, “_Farewell, Rob Bell_ 
(https://twitter.com/JohnPiper/status/41590656421863424) ,” about a fellow 
pastor with whom he  disagreed. 
Perhaps there is a seamy underbelly of evangelicalism with a mob and  plenty of 
hit men ready to take out anyone who doesn’t affirm _supralapsarianism_ 
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logical_order_of_God's_decrees) . That scenario 
seems more possible to me  than the world suggested  in Salvation.

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