Case For Christ Screenwriter: 'Most Significant Movie of My Career in Terms of Kingdom Impact’

Brian Bird has had a hand in more than 25 movies and television shows over the past three decades – including Touched by an Angel and When Calls the Heart – but his latest project, The Case For Christ, ranks near the top in his book.Bird was screenwriter for the film, which opens this weekend and follows the story of Lee Strobel’s transformation in the early 1980s from atheist to Christian apologist.“In my 30 years of doing this work, this is the most significant movie of my career in terms of kingdom impact,” he said. “And I think the results on-screen bear that out – not because I’m such a great screenwriter, but we had a great team on this.”Bird was executive producer and wrote the screenplay for the 2015 movie Captive, is executive producer of the ongoing Hallmark TV series When Calls the Heart, and was a producer of the hit show Touched by an Angel from 1999-2003.His faith and his extensive experience with family-friendly content is one reason Strobel asked him to write the screenplay for The Case For Christ (PG). The two also are good friends.Bird estimates that 75-80 percent of the movie is “on the money” of what happened in real life. The rest of it includes composite characters – that is, a single character who represents several real-life people – and time-shifting. Such tweaks were necessary to make the film not only entertaining but compact.Michael Foust recently spoke with Bird. Following is a transcript, edited for clarity:Michael Foust: Lee Strobel is your friend, but what else about his story made you want to get involved?Brian Bird: As anyone knows who has read The Case for Christ, that book is a deep data dive – 13 world-class experts – the world’s foremost leading authorities on the proof for the resurrection. All the evidence for Christianity is there. He was a hard-core atheist and cynical journalist who deeply loved his wife and his kids, and was trying to rescue his wife from herself. She had become a Christian at what he thought was a cult – Willow Creek [Church]. His whole quest was to rescue her and to get her back, because in his mind they had a perfectly happy atheist marriage. And he loved her. So I knew there was a great love story there. He’s the hero of the movie, but he’s an atheist. He’s trying to save his wife. You have some sympathy for that, even if his skepticism is infuriating.Foust: You were able to get quite a bit of apologetics into the film. What were the challenges in weaving apologetics without it becoming knee-deep in minutia?Bird: That definitely was one of the toughest aspects of crafting this – to figure out how much would be too much and how much would be enough, to find the balance. There were 13 world-class experts in the book. Well, we couldn’t cover all thirteen. I knew that we could get away with four or five expert witnesses, but not much more than that. So I focused on what seemed to be the three most cinematic ideas in the evidence – the veracity of the 500-plus witnesses who saw Jesus after the crucifixion, thereby verifying that the resurrection did happen. Secondly, the fact that there was no conspiracy to fake Jesus’ death – that it was not a hoax, that He truly did die on that cross. And thirdly, the authenticity of the ancient manuscripts. We wanted to make the case for Christ, but we didn’t want to give a book to people.Foust: But the movie isn’t just about apologetics.Bird: Right. There were three other big storytelling points in the true story: First, the love story, and second the whole big-city journalism story. Lee actually got nominated for a Pulitzer Prize for a series of stories. Then there was his discovery that all of the great icons of atheism in history had deep father wounds, like him. I knew it could get very dry very fast if it was just Lee talking to somebody in an office somewhere. So we tried to give it a little bit of sense of urgency, like it was a big mystery he was trying to solve. It was a bit of a Da Vinci-code search for evidence.Foust: How do you want this to impact people?Bird: If you’re a believer, you have the cure for everything in the universe. Yet, most of us sit on it. We don’t share it. We just hold on to it. Something’s deeply wrong with that. This movie depicts that cure, and we have the opportunity to share it with people, not as propaganda but as a really good, true story that really happened. It had the impact of eternity on Lee and Leslie Strobel, and can have the impact of eternity on people who watch it. Buy a neighbor a ticket to this movie, and then go out to dinner afterwards and have the conversation that you’ve always wanted to have.EDITOR’S NOTE: This interview article originally appeared at Scenes, an online daily devoted to entertainment and culture.

4 Reasons You Should See The Case For Christ Movie

This is an exciting weekend. It is the opening weekend of The Case for Christ, a faith film releasing in over 1,100 theaters nationwide on April 7.

The Case for Christ is likely already showing in several of your favorite movie theaters starting this weekend.If you haven't already heard of the book The Case for Christ, it tells the story of Lee Strobel, who was an award-winning, legal editor at the Chicago Tribune in the 1980's. Lee was an avowed atheist, but one day his wife came home to tell him she had decided to believe in Jesus. This was difficult news for him, and set him on a journey to investigate the claims of Christianity in order to prove it false, and save his wife from what he considered to be a cult.After nearly two years of meeting with experts, and weighing the evidence, Lee concluded, as an atheist, that there was an avalanche of evidence pointing to the truth of Jesus Christ, and Lee chose to put his faith in Christ.In 1998, he shared the story of his journey in the book The Case for Christ, which has gone on along with follow up books, to be read by more than 14 million people worldwide.

IF YOU FOLLOW MY POSTS, YOU PROBABLY KNOW ABOUT THIS MOVIE ALREADY, AND MY FRIENDSHIP WITH LEE.

He has spoken at several of our conferences, and has become a friend over the past few years. We've been thrilled to partner as a ministry on the impact of this Pure Flix film by sharing it with as many people as we can.

OPENING WEEKEND FOR A FILM IS VERY IMPORTANT. THIS IS ESPECIALLY TRUE FOR FAITH-BASED FILMS.

Packing out theaters on opening weekend will potentially cause The Case for Christ to be shown in more than 2,000 theaters nationwide on Easter weekend, doubling the initial impact, and paving the way for the film to impact millions of people around the world in consecutive months.It is my great hope that you will see the film this weekend, and take a few friends along with you. Consider buying group tickets for your church, or doing a theater buyout in your city. And share your excitement about the film with everyone you know. Let's all mobilize behind this film to help it have the biggest impact possible.

HERE ARE 4 REASONS WHY YOU SHOULD SEE THE CASE FOR CHRIST MOVIE THIS WEEKEND:

Case for Christ

Mike Vogel plays spiritual skeptic, Lee Strobel, in the movie The Case for Christ

1. LEE'S STORY IS ICONIC AND UNFORGETTABLE

There are just some stories in the Christian world that you can't get out of your mind. Lee's story is one of those.Several years ago, we spent time with Elizabeth Sherrill, who was the ghost writer of The Cross and the Switchblade for David Wilkerson, My Hiding Place for Corrie Ten Boom, God's Smuggler for Brother Andrew, and others. It amazes me that she played such a role in telling stories that lived on in the Church.Lee's story reminds me of these iconic and unforgettable stories -- his story is such a God-story that needs to be told to more people.

2. LEE'S STORY HELPS US SEE THE LOGIC BEHIND OUR FAITH

Not many of us are as qualified as Lee to investigate the claims of Christianity with the keen mind of a journalist. Lee was trained by the best, and was an award winning journalist. He took these investigative skills and applied them to Christianity in a way few could do.Lee believes Christianity is an investigable faith, in the way journalists investigate their stories and weigh the evidence.He started out as a hardened atheist who thought faith was ridiculous and a crutch for the weak, and gradually realized "it would take more faith for him to maintain his atheism than to to put his truth in Christ."The Case for Christ movie gives some of this rock-solid evidence in an entertaining story format.

3. LEE'S STORY GIVES US A LONG VIEW OF WHAT GOD CAN DO IN A PERSON'S LIFE

From spiritual skeptic, to dedicated believer, Lee's life shows us with crystal clarity that Jesus changes everything.We all know that Christians are not perfect. Christians are nowhere near perfect, but yet Jesus changes everything. Jesus changes the trajectory of our lives. And with Lee, we see such a dramatic difference that Christ can make. People in our culture need to see the impact that Christ can make on a person's life.

4. LEE'S STORY WILL HAVE YOUR FRIENDS AND YOUR NEIGHBORS TALKING

It is not often that such a powerful, well done, solid Christian film plays in our local theaters. We need to treasure these opportunities.The Case for Christ movie is releasing in theaters nationwide, and will have multiplied thousands talking about faith and the reality of Jesus. This is an easy inroad to talk about faith with your friends and neighbors who need the Lord, and I hope and pray you won't let it pass you by.For more information, and for showtimes near you, go to TheCaseForChristMovie.comNote: The article above originally appeared at thinke.org.

READ: ‘The Case For Christ’ Movie Producers Offer Leaders Links/Key Dates to Maximize Outreach