No book, either the Bible or even The Urantia Book that I am a student of, can ever take the place of one's personal experiences involving the spiritual reality of God. This same concept applies to movies as well. So my faith in God was not altered one way or the other when a little over a minute into this episode about Prophets, they show (for three to four seconds) the back side of a naked man walking down a dirt road as the narrator tells us about Isaiah walking naked through the streets of Jerusalem for three years. But my faith in the producers of this show headed in a negative direction from this point on (that is to say that I tuned out even though I tried to watch the rest and listen with an open mind). It's not that I am particularly offended by nudity since from what I've been told, that's what I was wearing when I came into this world...absolutely nothing. And if the show was about how to join a Mesopotamian nudist colony or how to get an even suntan all over or perhaps even how to get arrested before you even have a chance to get an even suntan all over, then I would not have been so surprised by what seems to me to have been a poor choice of visual imagery considering the subject matter. But I did assume that a documentary produced by A & E TV about the Mysteries of the Bible would be a family-friendly production suitable for all ages of viewers especially when it is rated TV-G. Apparently, my assumption was invalid. Perhaps Coppertone was one of their sponsors when this first aired on March 17, 1995.