Evan Whitfield and Fune Tautala in The Christians (Dangerpants Photography) |
The Christians
Pony World Theatre
October 11 - 13: Plymouth Congregational Church, 1217 6th
Ave. (Wheelchair accessible.) All shows are Pay-What-You-Can and ½ of ticket
sales will benefit Lambert House!
October 17 - 26: St. Peter's Episcopal Church, 1610 S King
St. (Sorry, NOT Wheelchair accessible)
While watching the masterful Lucas Hnath play, The
Christians, unfold in a real church, it occurred to me that you could
probably rather neatly divide the world into two camps: those who believe in
Hell and those who don’t. It’s a pretty big issue, especially to fundamentalist
churches, where many or most of them preach particularly that those who don’t
believe in Jesus are doomed to Hell, and therefore family members with different
beliefs could end up in different afterlives from each other.
That idea – being in different afterlives than other
relatives you love – is a pretty big part of the imperative to make sure your
relatives believe what you believe. It’s so important that it can dictate what
kind of church or community you belong to, even if all the choices are “Christian”
and if all the attendees “believe in Jesus as their lord and savior.”