Talk:The Case for Christ

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Plot edits
A User recently (on April 2) tried to change the plot description of this movie to reflect an incorrect storyline.

The user edited the plot to say "A Christian interviews other Christians to attempt to prove Jesus is indeed the Christ." without providing any sources to confirm the legitimacy of the edit, while claiming that he was correcting an error by removing nearly a paragraph of fairly well-sourced text and keeping the citations to give an air of credibility to his edit that would have evaporated on any closer and intellectually honest inspection

The purpose of this edit held a very likely political motivation to attempt to discredit the film by painting it as nothing more than Christian backscratching. In reality, the film portrays the events in the life of Lee Strobel which brought him from a position of atheism to a position of Christianity through a sincere investigation. Any future edits to the plot should portray this accurately. I recommend that this user's IP address be prohibited from editing this article. The contributor's previous contributions can be found here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Contributions/2607:FB90:97B:1873:3411:9A11:39FF:5419 — Preceding unsigned comment added by 130.126.255.76 (talk) 16:26, 3 April 2017 (UTC)

Why be so harsh on the previous editor? Is it because you're worried that the edit was correct? From an analysis of Strobel's life and work, we only have his personal word to go on for being a "former" atheist, and from his gross mischaracterisation of what atheism is as a philosophy, expounded in his books, we can be very doubtful as to the veracity of his claim. My guess that the former description of this film as "A Christian interviews other Christians to attempt to prove Jesus is indeed the Christ." will indeed be far more accurate a description as what currently is on the page (it is, after all, a description of everything he has written).83.136.45.62 (talk) 23:10, 5 April 2017 (UTC)


 * When summarising a movie plot, whether ficticious or not, we give a synopsis of the storyline of the film, not a witty comment of what we think actually happened. Your suggestion that the previous line was more accurate is wildly incorrect, seeing as it is not what happened in the film.


 * Moreover, your opinion that the events of the film are a lie or exagerated are not only irrelevent to the article, but wrong. The characters in the film existed, and they were not all Christian. And your insinuation that Strobel was not an atheist because the movies depiction doesn't portray what you think it should feels a lot like you're leaning on a "no true Scotsman" argument.2600:1:921E:7448:D02C:221D:168E:9574 (talk) 05:41, 18 April 2017 (UTC)