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The Passion Trilogy
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The Passion Trilogy List Price: $29.95
Our Price: $26.99
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Features
 Animated
 Box set
 Color
 DVD-Video
 NTSC
 3 Award Winning Movies in 1 Package
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The Passion Trilogy Customer Reviews
  1  
♥♥♥♥♥ 2 of 3 isn't bad
The Kingdom of Heaven and He Is Risen were produced years ago and are quite good. The animation is only as good as the old Saturday morning cartoons, since these kind of productions are of necessity low budget. But the writing and direction are great, resulting in stories that are fleshed out but still true to the scriptural narrative, and actually blend elements from the different gospels and from within each gospel very coherently. Something this has, that most dramatizations of Christ's resurrection don't have, is John's account of Jesus' appearance to his apostles in Galilee, during which he asks Peter, "Lovest thou me?" and urges him to "Feed my sheep". It's done pretty well. Worthy Is The Lamb is a more recent production, with animation shifted from South Korea to India or Pakistan, and a new writer. It takes a very emotional subject, Christ's suffering in the garden, during his trial, and on the cross, and actually makes it pretty stale. However, most kids with an interest in Bible stories will probably like it. Of course these stories are simplified for children, but even so, Caiaphas and his cronies are a little too one-dimensional, diabolically evil characters, and almost painful to watch at times. I'm sure they were all too concerned about their own influence, and that jealousy played a large part in their desire for Jesus' blood, but blindly misguided as they were, they likely had some genuine concern for saving the people from a false messiah. The inclusion in this title of Old Testament prophecies that mirror the events of Christ's last day in mortality is a nice touch though. The price of this trilogy is worth the two good titles, even if you decide to toss out the latter.

Of note, this trilogy and the entire Animated Stories from the Bible series is produced by Nest, a family/moral values animation company that is owned and operated by members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, or the Mormons. In fact, their first animated scripture stories were from the Book of Mormon. However, because of the difficulty in making a profit from products like this, the company does its best to hide its ties to Mormonism so as to not turn off the evangelical Christian community and its buying power, because of the (like Caiaphas) misguided antagonism of many evangelicals against Mormons. Productions like this should be enough to demonstrate to any honest person that Mormons, like the producers of these cartoons, are not part of some bizarre cult as some evangelicals claim, but really do worship the biblical Jesus as Savior of the world.
  1