The True Story Behind Beauty and the Beast


beauty-and-the-beast-2The Beauty and the Best
is truly a story as old as time. Disney has produced the story multiple times: first as an animated film, then as a Broadway musical, and now as a live-action film. And with each ensuing production,  Disney twists the plot around just a smidgen more. Before deciding on which version you like the most, I encourage think through these 5 major chnages that Disney made to Gabrielle-Suzanne de Villenuve’s  short story.

1. There are no Gaston, LeFou, or Monsieur D’arque in the original story.

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Though Belle has multiple suitors because she is pretty, good-natured, and comes from a wealthy family, none of them are named Gaston. Like in the movie, Belle turns down all of her suitors because she “thought herself too young to marry,” especially given her tight relationship with her father  (p.4).

Consequently, the book contains none of Gaston most outlandish and entertaining lines. As expected, LeFou is also absent from the original story. (The story does however feature a plethora of foolish people who could serve as the inspiration for LeFou) Without question, Disney also choose to give LeFou a homosexual background for its own purposes. Disney did not bend their latest film back towards to the original narrative. The company is increasingly bending the narrative to fit their story.

2. Belle is not an only child.

She actually has two older sisters and three brothers. The two older sisters are extremely vain and openly chase after wealth and prestige at the expenses of their family. Belle’s brothers are decent people. They work faithfully to support their father and volunteer to fight the Beast when they first hear of the Belle’s predicament.

3. Cogsworth, Lumiere, and all their other friends are not in the original.

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Yes, these popular and quintessential characters did not make the original story. Things like oats being in the stable, food on showing up on the table, and new clothes being laid out on the bed happen magically. But, all these magical happenings are the work of a fairy and not animated and slightly cursed household items.

4. No magical rose and a New Plot

The crux of the Disney plot does not exist in the original story. Rather as Belle’s father prepares to leave the Beast’s castle,  he grabs a bunch of roses for Belle from the Beast’s garden.

Up to this point, the Beast had been secretly caring for the Belle’s father. But when the Beast sees the merchant taking the roses, the Beast angrily shows himself for the first time. Then, he claims that the Belle’s Father has repaid hospitality with theft. The Beast then demands that the merchant or one of his daughters must die within three months’ time to atone for the merchant’s sin. The merchant returns home with his horrible news in a fright, fully intending to return to the Beast’s castle. But Belle has other plans. And thus, the story of the Belle and the Beast begins in earnest.

5. True love equals self-denial.

Both Belle and the Beast have to deny themselves to find true happiness. In addition to his ugliness, the Beast also has to act dumb or be punished again by the evil fairy. And Belle has to get to the point where she is willing to look past the Beast’s ugliness.

This takes a good deal of time. Belle turns down multiple marriage offers from the Beast because he is so hideous. Finally when the beast is at the point of death, Belle relents and realizes that true beauty is found in the heart. She ignores her impulses and pledges herself to the man who had shown, “me so much kindness.” And the rest is history!

Belle’s vain, selfish sisters who almost destroyed Belle’s relationship with the Beast are then turned into statues by the good fairy (almost the opposite of the Disney ending). And, Belle? She lives happily ever after with the Beast (now turned prince) and her father.

To get your own copy of the original story Click Here

Life For Christians After Beauty and The Beast

beauty-and-the-beastLast week, the evangelical world was shocked to learn that Disney has incorporated a pro-homosexual message into their upcoming movie, Beauty and The Beast.  But that is not all. We have also learned that the Disney T.V. show Star vs. the Forces of Evil contains a scene where several couples (including homosexual couples) are showing kissing in the background. Evangelicals are left wondering, “Has Disney lost its mind?”

Unfortunately, the answer is no. In fact, Disney probably has a better understanding of the American culture than most churches do.  

According to Barna researchers, only 36% of Americans went to church this Sunday. Instead of looking to the Bible for guidance about life 91% of  Americans look within themselves to find the answers to life biggest questions. As they looked within, most of them (69%) have discovered that any kind of sexual expression between two consenting adults is ok. And 71% of them approve of divorce and 63% are ok with sexual fantasies.

The LGBT lifestyle and sexual revolution ethic are no longer extreme in the mind of most Americans. Christianity is the extreme. Today, 60% of Americans consider attempting to convert others to your religion to be extreme action. And 52% think condemning same sex relationships because of religious convictions is also extreme. 

We have even seen this shift in politics. Both major political parties have embraced the revolution, praising the homosexual lifestyle.  In short, Christians no longer dominate the morality of America. Trump’s arrival in the White House has not changed that reality as Disney has reminded us.

p9399_p_v8_afNow in all fairness, Disney’s shift away from normative, conservative, evangelical thought is nothing new. As early as 1940, Jiminy Cricket was telling children, “To always let your conscience be your guide.” But now, Disney no longer feels that it  has to tiptoe around Christian values. Mickey and company have gauged the cultural winds and determined that  is they have the power to directly challenge the biblical family norms they once had to respect.

Going forward, I think we should skip Beauty and the Best. I do believe that watching sinful thing after sinful thing will adversely effect our souls and actions. To some degree, Disney understands this reality too (though the corporation clearly does not view its agenda as morally wrong). Disney want us to accept and to respond to the message of the movie in a positive way. But we cannot because we serve a power greater than the emotions of our fellow men and women.

As Paul encourages us in Romans 12:2 to

Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewal of your mind, that by testing you may discern what is the will of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect.

Perhaps by doing so, we will be able to send Disney a message. But I suspect our boycott will not hurt Disney too much financially since Bible believing Christians are a minority culture. However, punishing Disney should not be are ultimate goal. Protecting our souls and the souls of our children is our primary purpose. As we loving sit out, we will hopefully have opportunities to discuss our convictions and to share our faith with our families and with the watching world.

As we set ourselves apart, we must be careful not to make the homosexual agenda the measure of our success. We must flee sin in all of its forms and protect our children from all the various lusts of the world. We must stop approving of sitcoms that make light of heterosexual immorality, divorce, and affairs. We must stop pretending that pornography has no effect upon our relationships.  We must stop lying, cheating, and excusing sins as ‘ok’ because we like them. We must fill our mind with the Scriptures and with movies, songs, and books that are consistent with the divine narrative of the Bible.

We do not have to avoid all secular media going forward to be good Christians. But, we do have to be wise and discerning when we select movies, T. V. shows, albums, and books for ourselves and our kids. We must avoid things that lead us and our kids to embrace sin and to minimize truth. Such discernment will probably leave us with fewer and fewer options because our American culture is no longer synonymous with our Christian culture. 

The world where college students can convince their atheistic professors of the existence of God is increasingly shrinking. The world where Disney characters wrestle with same sex attraction is growing. We are living in a digital Babylon. Disney understands this new reality. Do you?

Guarding Your Heart Isn’t Just A Romance Thing

When we think of guarding our hearts, we think of relationships.  We think of the guy Heart blogwho spends more time talking about himself than his date, the girl who leaves her date in the food court to hangout with her friends, or the dude who has his mom apologize to his girlfriend. We tell our friends and children to, “guard their hearts.” “Run from these losers!”  And while there is some truth to this sentiment, guarding our hearts goes well beyond the boyfriend girlfriend paradigm. It’s a way of life.

What Guarding Your Heart Really Means

 Watch over your heart with all diligence, for from it flow the springs of life.” – Proverbs 4:23 

What Solomon is taking about here is not your emotions. He is not talking about the happiness that comes from your first kiss, an over sized  teddy bear, or a ridiculously expensive dozen roses.  In Solomon’s day, people thought your stomach or your bowels (if you are a KJV only Bible kind of guy) where home to one’s emotions.  Instead of saying “He stole my heart,” the Hebrews would have said, “he stole my stomach.”

When Solomon mentions the heart, he is talking about your command and control center. Biblically speaking, the heart accumulates, stores, and process the information that determines your actions. Solomon is saying guard your heart; guard your thoughts; guard your will; guard your life. Solomon is foreshadowing the words of Jesus found in Luke 6:45:

A good man brings good things out of the good stored up in his heart, and an evil man brings evil things out of the evil stored up in his heart. For the mouth speaks what the heart is full of.”

The heart directs our life. What we put into our heart – what we think about, what we mediate on – determines how we act and speak. We buy our spouse roses because we think her beautiful, caring, and intelligent. We snap at our co-worker in anger because we think him incompetent, selfish, and annoying. Our kids complain because they think that the Disney Channel is better than obeying their parents.  Out of our hearts flow, “the springs of life.”

2 Ways To Guard Your Heart

So how do we guard our heart? How do we keep our heart pumping out fresh water?

First, we trust God. Proverbs 3:5 says “Trust in the LORD with all your heart; and lean
not to your own understanding.” When get angry, when we get upset, and when we complain, we stop trusting God. We are upset that God is not on board with our program. And, we sin to let him know that we know better. The solution to all this confusion is to trust God. And the only way to develop a trust in God is to spend time with him. We have to study his word and pray. To guard our hearts, we must fill them with the word of God. The child who knows that God wants her to obey her parents can resist the temptation to shout at her mom. Because the daughter trusts God’s word, she goes and cleans up her room without complaining, knowing that obedience is better than sitting in front of the T.V. If we fill our hearts with the Bible, we can walk by the Spirit and avoid anger, envy, and so much more (Gal. 5:16).  As the hymn says, “Trust and obey, /For there’s no other way/To be happy in Jesus,/But to trust and obey.”

Second, we stop trusting our heart. Is there anything more counter cultural? Pretty much disney-world-978134_1920.jpgevery Disney Movie ever made tells us to “Trust our Hearts.” And every Hallmark heroine solves life’s grand dilemma’s by “following her heart.” According to our culture, true love, goodness, and wisdom is said to be found within. But, the Bible says the opposite.

To guard our hearts, we must stop listening to them. In Proverbs 3:5, we are told “not to lean on our own understanding.” Proverbs 28:19 amps up the command stating, “He that trust in his own heart is a fool.” Why is God so against us following our hearts? Is he a romantic killjoy? No. God is a loving merciful, savior who understand you and me better than you and I understand you and me. God knows we are all sinners. He knows that our hearts are “deceitfully above all things and desperately wicked” (Jer. 17:9). He knows that to listen to our hearts is to listen to a liar. We wouldn’t ask a Bernie Madoff to oversee our investments. Why would we trust our heart to guide us to true love? Similarly,  we would not ask Bonnie and Clyde to watch our kids while we went out on a date. Why would we trust our heart to tell us how to treat our kids when they disobey us? Our hearts are not the beautiful things that Valentine’s Day cards are made of. They are muddy pits of despair. Don’t listen to them.

Instead of listening to our hearts, we need to preach to them. We need to daily remind our hearts of God’s grace, wisdom, and mercy. Instead of trusting our feelings and emotions, we need to inform them. We need to compare them to scripture. We must make them match up to God’s words. To guard our hearts well, we must daily fill our hearts with the things of God.

Does God care about who we date and marry? Most definitely! But guarding our heart is not just a dating principle. It’s a way a life. It’s something we have to do every day. We have to guard our hearts!

How are you guarding your heart?