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Christianity TodayFebruary 7 2000

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Comics:The End of the Peanuts Parables
Charles Schulz dies on eve of last strip



Comic-strip characters often save the world, but cartoonist Charles Schulz allowed his characters to live in it.In the wake of Schulz's death Saturday night, more people are examining the meaning of the 18,000 daily comic strips with which he filled more than 2,500 international newspapers during his 50 years with the Peanuts gang. The enduring popularity of Charlie Brown, Snoopy, Linus, and Lucy can be traced beyond the cartoon's gentle reflections to the frustrations Schulz allowed his characters to face.

Schulz, whose parents were Lutheran, became involved with the Church of God (Anderson) at an early age and blended his religious convictions with his work. The Peanuts gang often echoed Schulz's faith and evoked chuckles with honest admissions of frailty.

"Peanuts often assumes the form of a modern-day Christian parable," says Robert L. Short, author of The Gospel According to Peanuts (Bantam, 1968).

Schulz's strip compares to the parables of Jesus, Short told Christianity Today: both storytelling forms leave the listener to interpret the true lesson.

Schulz, who died at age 77, exercised care in the way he expressed his faith. "I would rather bend a message a little bit to put over a point than to have a whole strip dropped because it was too obvious," Schulz often said.

But somehow the lessons Schulz learned as he pored over biblical commentaries in preparation for his Sunday-school class made it into the papers. Many of his cartoons alluded to biblical stories without referring to the text.

For instance, Schulz hinted at the parable of the foolish man who built his house on the sand: after wind and rain destroy his sandcastle, Linus says, "I know there's a lesson in this somewhere, but I can't remember what it is."

Other ...




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