Home Page | Calendar | Forums | Login | Turn Images On |
Home > Media > Articles

Don't settle for cheap alternatives

Dom Vincent

 

Much has been said and debated recently about the newest craze to hit cyberspace, Twitter.  For the uninitiated, Twitter is a free “micro-blogging” service that enables users to update anyone in their online social networks.  Update about what?  Update about anything.  The whole premise of Twitter is that people want to give and receive comprehensive information about life’s minutiae.  “Let me tell you what I ate for lunch”; “I had a very strange dream last night”; “Did you catch last night’s episode of Lost?”  And on and on.  This chatter is called “tweeting” – blogging in quips and snatches so that we can stay “hyper-connected” (Twitter’s term).

Having never “tweeted” I can only imagine how much fun it is to have an on-going, give-and-take newsfeed with all my friends throughout the day.  Apparently it is a lot of fun if the reports on its popularity are to be believed.  But, at its core the popularity of Twitter must rest on a more fundamental level.  Like so many other social networking technologies, Twitter seems to help us scratch an itch we all feel deep down: we need to be connected to others in a thriving community.

It is no surprise, then, to hear that tweeting is finding a home in some churches.  Time Magazine reports that a small number of churches have embraced the practice by which people can instantly respond to what is going on in a service by tweeting.  Their messages are sent to others in the congregation or are projected onto a screen.1 From trivial to deep, the thoughts of individuals across a congregation are broadcast for further reflection and even dialogue.  It must make for an exciting Sunday morning and a sense that the congregation is awake, active, and involved in each others’ experience.  More than that, some church leaders see it as a great opportunity to advance healthy community life. “It’s a huge responsibility of a church to leverage whatever's going on in the broader culture, to connect people to God and to each other”. These are the words of Todd Hahn, pastor of Next Level Church in Charlotte, North Carolina, USA, and an apologist for Twitter use in services.  This however provokes a question regarding the Church, contemporary culture, and our understanding of community.  Who is setting the terms of what constitutes a healthy community?  Is it the “wider culture” or the Body of Christ?

The example from Next Level church is but a small one and really doesn’t help us answer that larger question.  Neither is it the case that Twitter is a cause for concern.  It is a tool and like others can be used well or foolishly.  The problem is that Twitter, as a tool, isn’t a fulcrum robust enough to “leverage” much of anything that can seriously be called prayer—which is the food of communion with God—or conversation—which is the life blood of friendship.

The apostle Paul in the book of Ephesians makes an extended case for the unity of the Church and by doing so shows us what true community looks like.  Paul uses his favourite image of what the Church is: it is a body with each member being organically connected to the other.  Despite our differences we are united through the life, death, resurrection and ascension of Jesus Christ, our saviour and the one true King.  We have access to God the Father through the Spirit (Eph. 2:18).  The eternal, loving, insoluble community of the Trinity is the foundation of our community in the Church.  Paul, however still must encourage the Church to work out that unity in practical ways.  We are to bear with one another (4:2), maintain an eagerness for unity (4:3), speak truth to one another in love(4:14,25), put our hands to good use in order to share with those among us in need (4:28), use our mouths to speak in ways that are fitting and encouraging (4:29), and show kindness, tenderheartedness and forgiveness.  These are the activities of a healthy community, one in which its members are working in concert for each other and in service with each other.

This rich vision of community life in so many respects shows up much of what passes for community in general within our plugged-in and on-the-go lifestyles.  With little time to actually establish and maintain meaningful relationships, we content ourselves by merely making digital “connections” with others, however tenuous.  Twitter, and Facebook, and MySpace allow us the illusion, at least, that we are in community with others even as we run breathlessly to the next thing.  By relying too heavily on these technologies we should not be surprised if the very concept of community is eroded within our understanding.  This erosion occurs at least along two lines: 1) a supplanting of the healthy give and take of conversation with “updating”, a practice that, given our self-centeredness, easily becomes narcissistic and 2) a loss of an ability and opportunity to really commune with another person in person.

The danger of online social networking is the level of control that users have of what others see and do not see.  If someone does not play the game as we want him to we can simply block him.  If another finds my jokes funny why wouldn’t I keep sending them along?  Before long a comfortable network of individuals gets established  and what counts as meaningful communication between one another is simply an exchange of mutually-reinforcing false images of each other—truly a perverse intimacy.  It is easy to hide behind a text message.  It is far more difficult to look into someone’s eyes and speak the truth.
Yet, it is precisely this kind of embodied truth-telling that we need even if it is difficult.  We cannot understand and love one another deeply, exhort one another accurately, serve one another sacrificially, and forgive one another meaningfully unless we share life with each other, substantially, in the flesh.  This is a simple truth, perhaps even a trivial one, but even the Church needs to have it rehearsed in an age in which digitally-nurtured loneliness is becoming commonplace.

By “outsourcing” the hard work of human interaction to computer mediation we run the risk of jeopardizing the very thing we long for: we risk the loss of actually being in a real community within which we can give and receive love.  Don’t settle for cheap alternatives.

Dom Vincent worked at Christian Heritage until May 08 and has now returned to the States, working at Biola University.

1 See www.time.com/time/business/article/0, 8599, 1895463,00.html (Author: Dom Vincent)

Articles in this group

Why a Christian Perspective on History is Vital
Remember your leaders, those who spoke to you the word of God. Consider the outcome of their way of life, and imitate their faith. Hebrews 13:7 (Author: Peter Greyling)

Longing for 'Home' in The Hunger Games
November 2012 Article (Author: Angeline Liles)

Sola Scriptura...
In what sense does the Bible inform our understanding of ‘goodness’? (Author: Simon Aston)

'A Religion for Atheists?'
A critique of Alan De Botton's book, 'A Religion for Atheists' (Author: Jon Thompson)

Historical Reinvention
Is our history being re-written as we speak? (Author: Kevin Moss)

Western Autumn After 'Arab Spring'?
A fascinating look at recent events in North Africa and the UK. From our annual newsletter, November 2011. (Author: Vishal Mangalwadi)

The End of the World?
It must be testimony to something that Harold Camping has, in so swift a time become a household name and face. The media have gleefully circulated images of this gentleman that entirely support everyone‘s mental picture of the archetypal fundamentalist. (Author: Kevin Moss)

The King James Bible and The Cambridge Connection
The year 1611 marked the authorisation by King James I of England to produce a new Bible in English. 2011 therefore marks the 400th anniversary of the commissioning. (Author: David Berkley)

The Pietistic Roots of Evangelicalism Today
Contemporary Evangelicalism needs to understand and deal with its pietist roots. January 2010 (Author: Ranald Macaulay)

‘By the open statement of the Truth’
Lausanne and the Polemical Imperative (Author: Ranald Macaulay)

The New Atheism
The term The New Atheism is one that Christians have had to get used to in the last few years, even if the ‘new’ connected to atheism seems something of a misnomer. (Author: Ian Cooper)

Francis Schaeffer: A Mind and Heart for God ed. Bruce Little 
A book review of the latest book on Schaeffer. which is our book of the month for June. (Author: Rachel Thorpe)

Staying Young Beyond Our Time?
We have long since discarded Shakespeare’s “seven ages”. Instead, we live in a capitalist system which encourages children to grow up as quickly as possible, and then tells adults to stay young for as long as possible. (Author: Rachel Thorpe)

Election 2010
Voting links (Author: Annie Simmonds)

'I'm being taken over': Popular music and the fear of the impersonal
Popular contemporary song lyrics reveal "The Fear" that lies at the core of our culture. (Author: Rachel Thorpe)

'Why I am not a Christian' : a Christian critique
Considering the 'sacred text' of new atheism (Author: Kevin Moss)

Year Round 2008-2009
Recovering the Past, Challenging the Present, Shaping the Future - A review of the last year. (Author: Christopher Townsend)

The Roman Return?
The wise keep their eyes on the merits and demerits of ideas for ideas have consequences (Author: Ranald Macaulay)

Our Cultured Admirers
People we would expect to be our cultured despisers turn out to be... (Author: Ian Cooper)

Christians and the Credit Crunch
Our TV screens are saturated with the latest reports of... (Author: Kevin Moss)

Belshazzar and the Crash
“Overwhelming pressures are being brought to bear on people who have no absolutes... (Author: Ranald Macaulay)

Rescuing Darwin or Wrecking the Faith?
An article published in Evangelicals Now, November 2008 (Author: Ranald Macaulay)

HIS Story Revealed
In a way Christian Heritage is all about stories, so as we near the end of a busy summer season let me share some of them, past and present, to bring you up to date. (Author: Ranald Macaulay)

Agreeing and disagreeing with Dawkins Part 2
Ranald argues that nothing in all history surpasses the brutality of the social systems most consistently modelled upon Dawkins' own atheistic world-view – Nazism and Communism. (Author: Ranald Macaulay)

Divinity and Dawkins - Debating Delusions
The Dawkins Letters and Agreeing and Disagreeing with Dawkins Part 1 (Author: Ian Cooper and Ranald Macaulay)

'Education - For God's Sake!!'
A lethal virus has become an epidemic and our children are the victims (Author: Elaine Cooper and Ranald Macaulay)

Knowing God
Dick Keyes on intuition, imagination and knowing God. (Author: Dick Keyes, Photo: karlrpet)

What Can We Learn from Francis Schaeffer?
Ranald Macaulay reflects on the legacy of Francis Schaeffer. (Author: Ranald Macaulay)

Truth and Lies
words, truth, and morality (Author: Text: Ranald Macualay, Photo:A@lbi)

Democracy in Iraq?
“Democracy in Iraq? You must be joking!” says the common person today. (Author: Ranald Macaulay, Photo: Chris Christner)

As Implausible as Father Christmas?
Sola Scriptura and Expository Preaching Today (Author: Ranald Macaulay)

Humans: Religious by Nature
This claim seems ridiculous to many today who have a sense of the modern secular triumph over superstition, mythology (Author: Dick Keyes)

The UK: Prosperous but Disfunctional?
We are ridiculously prosperous in the UK; (Author: Ian Cooper)

West is East and East is West
On Hinduism and Western Culture (Author: Ranald Macaulay)

Wanted: Christian Satirists (GSOH Required)
On Recovering Christian Satire (Author: James Williams)

On Whose Side of the Door is the Handle?
On Whose Side of the Door is the Handle? (Author: Rob Ambler)

Jerry Springer the Opera
Ian Cooper discusses this controversial stage show. (Author: Ian Cooper)

Ideas Have Consequences: Sodom Prophesied and Revisited
The fact that we find ourselves living in Sodom should come as no surprise. (Author: Ranald Macaulay)

Paradigms of Tolerance: Cartoons, Compassion and the Cross
Amid the oceans of ink and hours of air-time devoted to the recent ‘cartoons scandal’ (Author: Chris Watkin)

The Dangers of Thin Religion
Francis Schaeffer used to say that what was needed in our time was both revival and reformation. (Author: Dick Keyes)

Religion - A peripheral Issue?
Religion - A peripheral Issue? (Author: Ranald Macaulay)

Heaven Knows How We'll Rekindle Our Religion
Heaven Knows How We'll Rekindle Our Religion (Author: Ranald Macaulay)

The Battle of Ideas
The Battle of Ideas (Author: Ranald Macaulay)

The Real Disaster
The Real Disaster (Author: Ranald Macaulay)

The Consequences of Ideas
Yesterday’s paper (1st Dec 2004) carried two fascinating sex-related news items. (Author: Ranald Macaulay)

Francis Crick
Francis Crick (Author: Ranald Macaulay)

Constantine to Charlemagne
Constantine to Charlemagne (Author: Ian Barrs)

Dostoyevsky's 'The Idiot'
Dostoyevsky's 'The Idiot' (Author: Rob Ambler)

The Secular Context and the Christian Worldview
The Secular Context and the Christian Worldview (Author: Ranald Macaulay)

Apologetic Communities
Apologetic Communities (Author: Ranald Macaulay)

Evil and Suffering
Evil and Suffering (Author: Jerram Barrs)

Biblical and Cultural Hermeneutics - Christianity and Culture
Biblical and Cultural Hermeneutics - Christianity and Culture (Author: Jerram Barrs)

Epistemology - Philosophy of Knowledge
Epistemology - Philosophy of Knowledge (Author: Jerram Barrs)

Idolatry
Idolatry (Author: Jerram Barrs)

Horatio Nelson
Horatio Nelson (Author: Ranald Macaulay)


© 2013 Christian Heritage High Accessibility Version. (Full Graphics Version)