Using children’s toy to relate Scriptures
Saturday, December 6, 2003
By Meredith James The Baltimore Sun
For as long as the stories that make up the Bible have been written
down, their authors have been adapting them in varying ways. From
the Hebrew Bible to the St. James Bible to more recent versions
such as the Precious Moments Bible and the Extreme Teen Bible,
the text’s sacred stories have been tailored for different
audiences.
The oddest new addition to this genre may be “The Brick
Testament” (Quirk Books, $14.95), 10 stories from the book
of Genesis “resculpted” using Lego toy building bricks.
“I choose to work in the medium of Lego simply because
it’s eye-catching and great fun to work with. And who doesn’t
get a chuckle out of seeing Lego Adam and Eve in the garden, or
Lego Moses smashing the Ten Lego Commandments? For me, it’s
all about making the content of the Bible more accessible without
changing that content,” creator Brendan Powell Smith explains.
Smith began publishing his images on the Internet. “The
Brick Testament”
www.thereverend.com
quickly gained fame and a cult following. Over two years, the
site has had almost 2 million visitors and has been featured in
Time and Spin magazines. It now includes seven books from the
Old and New Testaments; one of them, Genesis, is now featured
in a book released last month.
Although some may scoff at the idea of using children’s
toys to relate the Scriptures, Smith says that he’s had
a generally positive response.
“I’ve received hundreds of e-mails about the Web
site and now the book, and there is a large following both among
religious believers, including pastors and youth workers, and
devout atheists.”
The Catholic Telegraph, the newspaper for the Archdiocese of
Cincinnati, is including “The Brick Testament” on
its annual Christmas book list. Trade publication Publisher’s
Weekly said: “This creative, iconoclastic book is colorful
in every sense of the word, and will be appreciated by Lego enthusiasts
everywhere as well as whimsical Sunday school teachers.”
Still, just what Smith’s intentions are remains a little
fuzzy. While he refers to himself as “The Reverend,”
Smith describes himself as an atheist.
On his Web site and in his book, he claims that while he was
eating at Taco Bell, God spoke to him and told him to write this
story. Whatever the inspiration, Smith insists that he is “not
really out to change anyone’s mind about the Bible, just
to make them more aware of its content and hopefully entertain
them in the process.”