Earlier this week I asked the questions "Why Zombies?" and offered a few brief reflections. While it might be obvious, I think the first answer is because people are talking about them. We play games on our cell phones, kids have cartoon t-shirts, adults are watching "The Walking Dead" and they have entered some level of cultural popularity.
While it might be cliched for churches and pastors to talk about zombies just for popularity's sake, they should recognize some level of conciseness is manifesting. Zombie's are popular because they allow us to casually work out some fears and internal commentary regarding society.
For secular society, zombie movies let us joke about deep fears. Categorically, zombie fiction best inhabits a true secular eschatology in how it analyzes destruction and the human nature. In many zombie movies and stories, there is the idea that the disease/virus is the result of divine judgement and the survivors either recognizing or at least mentioning it. Inside of this judgement, humans are allowed to completely consume themselves. It is as though God as stepped away, reversed the incarnation and took away prevenient grace.
The desires of materialism, lust, power, food, and other flaws have disintegrated society and turned us into consumptive monsters that have reached the ultimate of sins. In our final grasp, we begin to literally feed on each other, and the remaining few metaphorically understand the ills of society and run from being consumed by them.
To best understand why people are talking about zombies, we need to best understand the emotions that make them relevant.
Next we are going to look at how the story of the church can offer an alternative to the story of destruction and consumption.
Glory be to the Father, Son and Holy Spirit:
As it was in the beginning, is now, and shall ever be, world without end.