It would be lovely if someone who happened to be both a gamer AND a practicing Christian felt comfortable enough to enter into this conversation.
Heh. That would be me, I guess, since I already posted! Honestly, there's so many points that have been touched upon both in and out of the article that it would take me way too long to offer a comment on all of them. So, I'll do my best to be concise.
First, the article references Christians as outsiders in the view of the majority in the game industry, when in fact as the article goes on to state, Christians see themselves as being just another person like anyone else who happens to believe in God:
They don't even consider themselves outsiders, he continues...
I live in the same world as everyone else and I have the same problems and struggles, but I also believe. I don't see how that makes me any more or less an outsider than someone who does or doesn't like grapefruit, except that, unlike my taste or distate for grapefruit, faith or lack thereof tends to be a core component of the self and therefore a highly combustible topic. (By the way, I don't much care for grapefruit at all.) Despite faith being a core component of a Christian's self, the author seems suprised that,
The rampant cynicism of the gaming industry doesn't seem to dent their morale at all.
I would respond that, of course my morale isn't dented because I deal with cynicism every day from co-workers, friends, media, random strangers on the interwebs, even my own. Why am I unaffected? Because I absolutely, 100% do not see myself as an outsider in any part of my life and anything you might say doesn't really sway my opinions much. However, returning to the article, the author continued to use language that throws an implication of negative labeling back at me:
These outsiders-but-not...
It's a subtle dig, but it makes me think that Mr. Drake wants me to be an outsider. I'm not allowed in the club for whatever that's worth. In the end, I was a little disappointed that the article didn't make any attempt to overcome its own biases as other Escapist articles have done on less weighty subjects.
The forum discussion presents quite a bit more material, especially the recent posts, and I don't have time to go into it all today. However, I did want to say something about logic and faith as that particular idea has permeated nearly all of the posts. If anyone reading this is interested in the topic of logic and faith and wants some fascinating reading material, whether or not you belive in the Christian God, please do try to make an effort to read something by one of the apologists mentioned at the following Wikipedia aricle:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christian_apologetics. C.S. Lewis' Mere Christianity and Josh McDowell's More Than a Carpenter are widely available and also excellent starting points. Perhaps start by reading the article itself if you are unfamiliar with the school of thought. Faith in Christ does not immediately and totally demand that one quell one's desire to understand the world around one in a logical way. In fact, any Christian scholar worth his or her salt will tell you that thinking logically about religion, faith, and the Bible is absolutely necessary.