It was b-e-a-utiful
I actually don’t think it was blasphemous or irreverent at all. I thought it had some good Christian messages, and here’s some
1. Prayer to God and every cloud having a silver lining. First off, I thought it was hilarious how they showed this regular man deal with prayers going through his mind. The concept of him turning prayers into files, post-its, and e-mail (called Yahweh! instead of Yahoo!) was a stroke of genius. Anyway, it showed that just because you ask God for something, doesn’t mean you’ll get it, deserve it, or need it. God told Bruce that if you want a miracle, you can be the miracle, in the sense that you should help others. One kid prayed to Bruce to help him get stronger or something similar to that and Bruce said yes. In a deleted scene, God shows Bruce that as a consequence, the kid becomes the school bully, with God saying that the boy was going to be a great poet one day, but because he became the bully, he will try to become a boxer, get on drugs, then work in a liquor store. There is also a deleted scene in which a woman asks Bruce to help her with finances. He says yes, and the woman has an accident in a grocery store and sues. God explains that she would have to call her estranged sister for help and that would have gotten the two of them back together if he denied her prayer.
2. Free will. God tells Bruce that he cannot mess with free will. Bruce nevertheless tried to force a woman to love him, but is unable to. He asks God how can he make someone love him without affecting free will, and He replies, “welcome to my world”. I thought that was very interesting.
3. God’s image. If we are made in God’s image, and if humour and happiness are positive, than one can assume that if we are made in God’s image, God must have happiness and a sense of humour as well. The God in the movie is also shown to be very calm and easy-going, which I think can be an accurate description of God if He is a loving God. It’s hard to imagine someone being filled with love without being happy