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What if?: Obama, the Nobel and the Lordship of Jesus
Thanks again for your your beautiful writing and your imagery here!
So, to be consistent, shouldn't you have written this longhand and mailed it by post? Not trying to criticize; the fact that I'm typing on this keyboard in front of this "flickering screen" means I'm complicit as well. I'm a big a fan of the Internet, but sometimes I wonder whether our obsession with Internet culture makes keeps us focused on the less tangible community we imagine to be "out there" and less on the real, face-to-face community we have around us.
Anyway, thanks for asking the questions. They're the type of questions I find myself asking daily. Except when I start craving fast food or see that brand new book in the bookstore or see that totally hilarious ironic t-shirt on that website or....
Your question "Maybe being radical and prophetic has less to do with new things and ideas and more to do with redeeming and reclaiming old things." I think reveals a lot about the answer you seek. I suspect that the answer is not the either the new or the old, but the both/and when new things and ideas redeem and reclaim old ideas and things.
I like learning old stuff, new stuff, and lots of stuff. I think God gave us a creative mind and enjoys seeing what we can come up with. But the more that I am rooted in the simple life, the more my focus is on the purposes to which he has called me, the more I can discern which new gadget or idea or fashionable trend is for me.
A 40,000 song capacity ipod would be great for someone who was trying to capture native cultural music in the field. That would mean that there was less to lug around and it would be easier to power such devices. It also might be great for having a musical library for a church. The musical history of the Church is long, beautiful, and extensive. New things like 40,000 song ipods allow us to reclaim and redeem things from the past in new meaningful ways.
I hope you will forgive my sarcasm here. I'm not a Luddite, I'm not a Luddite, I swear!! Just consider it irony--especially since I type this on a macbook! :)
@Joe: The idea of replacing something 'simple' for something more 'complex' sort of misses the point, I think. We enter into the heart of complexity (and avoid an oversimplification) when we refuse a costly machine and embrace embodied culture/community.
"Dear reader, I hope you will understand at least somewhat the disgust, the contempt, and the joy with which I have received this news.
"It disgusts me because I know there is no need for such products, which will put a lot of money into the pockets of people who don't care how they earn it and will bring another downward turn in the effort of gullible people to become better and smarter by the way of machinery. This is a perfect example of modern salesmanship and modern technology--yet another way to make people pay dearly for what they already have...
"My joy comes from my instantaneous knowledge that I am not going to buy either piece of equipment. When the inevitable saleswoman comes to tell me that I cannot be up-to-date, or intelligent, or creative, or handsome, or young, or eligible for sexual favors of so fair a creature as herself unless I buy these products, dear reader, I am not going to do it."
I suspect that at least some (if not all) of my comment would be supported by your thesis. If not, that's ok. But those are my two cents (and Berry's).
The quote is from Wendell Berry's book of essays: Sex, Economy, Freedom, and Community (pages xxi-xxii).
And I think part of the problem is that sometimes we are too postmodern for our own good. We enjoy the ride more than reaching the destination and avoid having defined targets and goals. It isn't so surprising that we fail to achieve things so often. Once it has become 'old hat' we're bored of it.
Regarding Ipods, whilst there might well be some people who would find this capacity very useful, surely you would agree it is hardly a mass market necessity. People are being sold something they don't really need on the basis it is 'bigger, sexier, shinier' than the last version.
I agree that people often buy new technology for the wrong reasons. When we understand our goals, then we have an appropriate basis to evaluate whether a new technology will help us get there.
I agree that there needs to be a balance between enjoying the ride and reaching the destination. If we're too goal oriented then we miss opportunities that come up a long the way (such as technology that can make the ride easier), but if we're too busy enjoying the ride (exploring new technologies), we never make any progress (in spreading the gospel, etc.).
I hear you calling readers back to the things they learned in kindergarten, that learning to do something well is as important or possibly more important as doing something new. If that is so, I agree. Most of us do better if we avoid either extreme of single mindedly deep or very shallowly broad.