Christianizing the Social Network

The Next Story: Life and Faith after the Digital Explosion by Tim Challies Zondervan, April 2011 208 pp., $12.99

Blogger Tim Challies understands both technology's potential and its potential seduction. He uses emerging tools to keep his 15,000 visitors updated daily at Challies.com. His new book, The Next Story: Life and Faith after the Digital Explosion (Zondervan), considers our reliance on technology and how it impacts our faith. Matthew Lee Anderson spoke with Challies about how Christians might think theologically about technology.

You write that we are "molded and formed into the image of what shapes us." What risks do technologies like Facebook and YouTube pose to the Christian life?

When technologies give us an ability, they also give us a desire. Before Twitter or Facebook, none of us cared about moment-by-moment updates from friends. But with the new tools, we've grown to desire—and sometimes even demand—that sort of information. YouTube heightens and preys upon our desire to see and be seen. It makes us exhibitionists, telling us that any part of the human experience can be someone's entertainment.

You point out that the "new Calvinists" gained influence by adopting technology. How do you see those tools shaping the movement?

You can't really understand new Calvinism apart from the Internet. It allowed us to hear from these people in an unprecedented way.

We seem to have short attention spans, and much of what we're learning and hearing comes through social media. Far more people are getting John Piper in 140-character chunks than are listening to his 45-minute sermons, which means we're not learning in more holistic ways.

Is a specifically Reformed understanding of technology possible?

If it is, I don't know that I want to major in it. But certainly, I am Reformed in my understanding of God's sovereignty over all creation and my heightened sense of human depravity. A Reformed understanding would take into account God's sovereignty even over technology as the starting point and ending point. God saw fit to allow us technology, and God cares how we use it. Our job is to ensure that we're using technology in a way that's subject to his authority.

Does the emphasis on depravity lead to a stronger sense of caution or skepticism toward new technologies?

I think Reformed theology causes us to expend more effort understanding our sinfulness. That might give us a different starting point when we look at technology. We might have more reasons to doubt ourselves, but we also need a heightened sense of God's sovereignty.

You seem ambivalent about the "rise of the images," which some Christians have praised for creating a more holistic, less rationalistic faith than the print culture brought about. How should Christians relate to images?

The Christian faith is carried by words. Jesus Christ is not the picture—he's the Word. And we have to acknowledge that God saw fit to record Scripture for us in words. We don't have to fear images, but we should be wary of them.

The promise of the Internet was universality. You emphasize the role geography plays in the formation of our communities. What role should distance and proximity play in choosing a church?

The problem actually goes back to the automobile, which gave people the opportunity to attend commuter churches rather than community churches. The ability to attend church a long ways away forced people to rethink church.

But in a world shaped by the Internet, people find their hearts drawn to churches a thousand miles away rather than a short drive away. As a result, they relate to people through chats and forums rather than face to face. It leads to a very mediated form of church community.

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Displaying 1–3 of 8 comments

Sheldon Perkins

I have no reliance on social media, and I use it sparingly. Still, I do not have the same fear of internet technology that I am seeing here. The fact is that there are still people active in the congregation I attend, and it continues to grow bit by bit. At the same time, I am able to augment my spiritual development by downloading audio sermons from preachers all over the world. I am able to reach out and fellowship with other believers whom I may never have otherwise met. I also have research capabilities I never would have had ten years ago, which allows me to determine a better understanding of the authority to which I submit (being the Word of God). The problems of the internet affect Messianic believers, as well as the historically newer Protestant and Catholic churches. By the same token we can all benefit from the potential for good, if we are wise and submit to the authority of the word.

k tra

Wow! This seems like someone who Actually, Truly has the fortitude to speak out against the facebook, twitter, my space church. I knew this was bad from the get-go, but I am a gen-X er. We just had TRS-80 and Steve Jobs to worry about. I have avoided the "social net" adamantly. I speak against it with all my fellow congregants. The body has become too impersonal and disconnected. We are meant to interact with each other IN PERSON. It has been that way from the beginning of time. Study has become looking up a 2 second verse online and shallow (very shallow) faith and understanding has become the norm. I pray, I am practicing being filled with the Spirit daily, taking up my cross. I sadly foresee a time very soon where faith will be tested. This will be the"great falling away" in Rev. We have to turn the children back to true faith and knowledge(as many as we can) while there is still time. The body is being puposefully weakened this way. The enemy had thsnd yrs to perfect it, awaken

Dreams and Visions and Authority

the protestant rebellion undermined authority in the first place, leaving God's word in the hands of the most degreed and articulate rather than in the proper hands of spiritually formed priests. The internet breaking down of authority, if it is happening, is just a protestant phenomenon too. As for being wary of images, that is also a protestant "problem". God gives us images to tell us the saving story in ways which strike deeper than Rhema words. That is also why God gives his people dreams and visions (see the prophets fro those whose faith is dry and words-only). We shoulod embrace authority, spiritual formation, and images and imagination to enrich our faith. Not to forget the real presence of Jesus in the sacriments including the full body of Christ and his blood in the eucharist.

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