The Door Magazine



         


The Door Magazine is a Christian satire and humor magazine, published bimonthly by Dallas, Texas USA based nonprofit Trinity Foundation. Self billed as "The World's Pretty Much Only Religious Satire Magazine", it pokes fun at the pompous of all persuasions and publishes thoughtful interviews from those one would least expect to be interviewed by it - both inside and outside the church world. The magazine has sometimes been called the Mad Magazine of religion.

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Mission and editorial content

The Door's reason for being is - according to its own staff and writers - to bring down to size those persons, institutions, and movements of whatever perspective - any and all - who abuse religion or use it for their own personal benefit. It uses cutting edge humor and satire to achieve those ends as a magazine.

Features currently running include:

Besides these features, The Door runs interviews with some rather unlikely people. Because of the magazine's low circulation, the interviewees sometimes feel free to say more than they do on contentious topics than they do in the mainstream American media. One example of this is its 1993 interview with Rush Limbaugh where he openly discussed his Christian faith. Nick Page, author of The Tabloid Bible has also been interviewed by its writers, discussing what some accounts in the Bible might look like from a British tabloid perspective. Little known people such as Kimberly Winston, formerly of the Dallas Morning News, are interviewed when it fulfills the editor's purpose - in this case, a mutual desire to expose what the magazine termed "phony faith healers" such as Robert Tilton. Garrison Keillor has also been interviewed in its pages. When this satire rag cannot get the big names, it will settle for lesser ones, such as Jerry B. Jenkins, Tim LaHaye's co-author of the Left Behind book series of apocalyptic matters.

Additionally, a large part of the magazine's articles come from freelance contributing writers. One short series entitled "The Call of the Mild" featuring the misadventures of a young male American missionary is one example of what can be found in this periodical. Others are the erstwhile "Faxable 'Toon Page", and other contributions such as "Robertson's Operation Tuna Surprise" and "Emoticons for the Modern Church." A Bible study with associate publisher Joe Bob "the Exegete" Briggs, aka John Bloom, gets published somewhat more often than the appearance of a blue moon.

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History

The magazine began publishing in 1971 in San Diego, California as The Wittenburg Door, a misspelling of the "Wittenberg Door" Martin Luther used to nail his 95 theses on the church door. After this error was already printed on the magazine, its founders, Youth Specialties - northern California based publishers of youth group materials - decided to keep the spelling as it was. One of its original founders, Mike Yaconelli, wanted to use the magazine to open discussion within the American evangelical Christian church about its problems. Originally with a Christian youth worker audience, the magazine over the years developed a reputation for being a thorn on the side of the institutional church in general. In 1989 the "Wittenburg" was dropped from its name, and its "just typed" subversive rag look was replaced with a more professional colored cover and glossy paper.

After two decades, Yaconelli admitted he had changed focus. He set about finding who could carry on the mission and editorial production he no longer had the same passion for, and Ole Anthony of the Dallas, Texas based Trinity Foundation agreed to accept Yaconelli's sale of The Door, as it was now called, for $1 in 1996. Upon the ownership change, Trinity has broadened the scope of who and what it satirizes to include any religious movement, institution, or person. A Beavis and Butthead cover on its September/October 1996 edition where they were satirically honored as theologians got the magazine tossed out of many Christian bookstores. By 2004 an editorial change was announced to the magazine's readers in its pages - it would sharpen its focus on Christian and church subject matter more, while not abandoning written material about other religions.

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References

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Sources/external links






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