I was not talking about what the angels looked like.
An angel did not come down and 'samurai' through the men of Sodom to help Lot escape, as the show depicts.
The entire account of just how God destroyed Sodom is in three verses of Genesis.
19:13 For we will destroy this place , because the cry of them is waxen great before the face of the LORD; and the LORD hath sent us to destroy it.
19:24 Then the LORD rained upon Sodom and upon Gomorrah brimstone and fire from the LORD out of heaven; |
19:25 And he overthrew those cities, and all the plain, and all the inhabitants of the cities, and that which grew upon the ground. |
In vs. 13 two "men" (described for the Genesis reader as angels, but appearing as men to Lot) declared that they were going to destroy the city. Vs. 24 and 25 say that the Lord overthrew the cities.
So, what's a movie director to do with this? The two angels are involved somehow. I suppose someone will be unhappy with any chosen representation of how Sodom is destroyed. So, why not give the angels Samurai superpowers? That will upset viewers a lot less than giving them hand grenades or Star Trek phasers, both being potentially as true as anything else.
The first words on the screen for this production are:
"This program is an adaptation of Bible Stories. It endeavors to stay true to the spirit of the book."
That implies that they will add to the story to adapt for what is missing, and morph the facts a bit while staying "true" to what they believe was the intent of the way it was told.
If you don't take a bit of artistic (or "dramatic") license, the story is uninteresting. To just stick to the literal written word would make each part seem incomplete. No matter what, someone will be upset at what is portrayed.
Really, for any follower of Johashua Melkizadek to complain about anyone else taking artisic license, I just cannot figure.