Crunchyfrog gets it entirely wrong. If this is politics motivating the bad reviews of Evan Almighty, it isn't your traditional left-right divide. This is a studio that wants to rewrite the bible just to turn it into a bland, inoffensive comedy.
Sorry, just saying "you're wrong" but failing to justify that statement with logic is just a waste of everyone's time. As I keep asking (while noticing the very-telling absence of actual answers to the question): who exactly get harmed if a studio (who is CLEARLY aiming the movie at Christians) wants to create bland, inoffensive comedies based on bible stories?
Sorry, but that's just the worst. Not jailable or anything, but a little deplorable. If you're going to make a comedy about the Bible, doesn't it at least deserve a storyline that either supports or rebuts the Biblical vision?
OK, and STILL my original question remains utterly unanswered, which means my argument continues to stand unchallenged: why, exactly is it a problem to create a comedy based on a biblical passage that neither "supports" nor "rebuts" the biblical version? Let me present to you a concept that few seem to grasp: Christians are NOT as binary, narrowminded or pedantic as most of the posters here. They understand that this is humorous entertainment product that employs a bible entry as its launching point. PERIOD. It's no more conspiratorial or didactic or intrusive or suspicious.
Sure, there are a lot of wacky tin-foil theories that one can spin about what the movie's REAL agenda is (Cutesy-pie Christian propaganda, or Hollywood reaching for collection plate dollars?) and there can be much pointless hand-wringing over how Evan Almighty is just another sad example of the Dumbing Down of America. But there's a foul stench of intellectual dishonesty to a lot of those theories, which would otherwise be instantly ridiculed out of the room if they were floated over a purely secular subject.