Christianity in SF
Christianity has been depicted in SF many, many times. Common uses include:
- Background Christianity
- Any work that takes place in a setting analogous to an Earth setting in which Christianity is common may include Christianity and religious faith as part of the general background.
- Christian allegories or metaphysics
- C. S. Lewis' Narnia books)
- Christianity as cultural mythology
- Use of ideas popularly associated with Christianity, without particular religious perspectives;
- Use of Christian supernatural hierarchy in some fantasy creation that semi-parallels Christianity but is really different
- This may include works which depict Christian eschatology as correct, but are simply more interested in depicting the struggle in a secular fashion
- e.g., The Stand by Stephen King
- It may also include works which depict (and assume) Christian beliefs are correct, but are simply interested in exploring the story aspects
- Anne Rice's Jesus series
retellings of Judeo-Christian stories
- (e.g., retellings of the Garden of Eve from Lilith's perspective
- The Red Tent by Anita Diamant
- The Last Temptation of Christ by Nikos Kazantzakis); Anne Rice's Jesus stories)
secret history of Christianity
- These stories may or may not include the supernatural as real. Numerous stories have imagined things like:
- Jesus' body being held and concealed by the Catholic Church (Elizabeth Peters' The Dead Sea Cipher);
- Jesus' offspring (The Da Vinci Code by Dan Brown);
- the role of women in Christianity (The Memoirs of Elizabeth Frankenstein by Theodore Roschach).
Historical Christianity
- Alternate histories in particular, and fantasy works set in times that are similar to historical Earth times (e.g., faux-medieval settings) often depict one or more historical variants of Christianity (e.g., Roman Catholicism) or events within Christianity (e.g., the Inquisition)
- Inquisition: Gael Baudino works; God's Fires by Patricia Anthony
- Witch-burning: Inquisition, above; also James Morrow's The Last Witchfinder (not SF)
Juxtapositions of Christianity and other religions
- Critiques of Christianity
- e.g., in opposition to female-oriented paganism in Starhawk's The Fifth Sacred Thing
- in opposition to female-oriented paganism Marie Jakober's The Black Chalice)
- or valorizations of Christianity
Christian dystopias
- Some Christian-like religion has created a dystopian society
- Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale is likeliest the most famous of these
- Esther M. Friesner's The Psalms of Herod
- Sheri S. Tepper's The Gate to Women's Country).
Satires:
- James Morrow's entire oeuvre