The Tech-Wise Family

Over the next few weeks we are going to be discussing a few technology tips on Tuesdays. I recently read The Tech-Wise Family by Andy Crouch and thought it well suited for the modern family. It can be a daily guide to navigate our world that has become enmeshed with technology.

Here are some introductory remarks on the proper place of technology.

Technology is in its proper place when it helps us bond with the real people we have been given to love.

Technology is in its proper place when it starts great conversations.

Technology is in its proper place when it helps us take care of the fragile bodies we inhabit.

Technology is in its proper place when it helps us acquire skill and mastery of domains that are the glory of human culture.

Technology is in its proper place when it helps us cultivate awe for the created world we are part of and responsible for stewarding.

Technology is in its proper place only when we use it with intention and care.

A new approach to technology

A new or better approach to technology involves radically recommitting ourselves to what family is about – what real life is about. Our homes aren’t meant to be just refueling stations, places where we and our devices rest briefly, top up our charge, and then go back to frantic activity. They are meant to be places where the very best of life happens.

We are continually being nudges by our devices toward a set of choices. The question is whether those choices are leading us to the life we actually want. I want a life of conversation and friendship, not distraction and entertainment; but every day, many times a day I’m nudged in the wrong direction. One key part of the art of living faithfully with technology is setting up better nudges for ourselves.

Nudges will never, on their own, build the wisdom and courage we need -partly because we often can’t control our environment, not matter how much we’d like to. We need to change something inside of us as well: to develop the strength to make good choices even when everything around us is nudging, or pushing, us in the wrong direction. And for that we need disciplines.

Spiritual disciplines

The central disciplines of the spiritual life, as taught by generations of Christian saints, have stayed the same for twenty centuries: solitude, silence, fasting.

The discipline of Sabbath, for example, doesn’t just help us take one day a week to enjoy deep and restorative rest; it helps us make choices the rest of the week to avoid anxiety and pride. The most powerful choices we will make in our lives are not about specific decisions but about patterns of life.

Because technology is devoted primarily to making our lives easier, it discourages us from disciplines.

So here’s the plan

The first and deepest is to choose character -to make the mission of our family, for children and adults alike, the cultivation of wisdom and courage.

The second is to shape space -to make choices about the place where we live that put the development of character and creativity at the heart of our home.

And the third is to structure time -to build rhythms into our lives, on a daily, weekly, and annual basis, that make it possible for us to get to know one another, God, and our world in deeper and deeper ways.

 

Tech-Wise Family: 1&2. Choosing Character & Shaping Space

Tech-Wise Family: 3&4. Structuring Time & Waking and Sleeping

Tech Wise Family: 5&6. Learning and Working & The Good News about Boredom

Tech Wise Family: 7&8. The Deep End of the (Car) Pool & Naked and Unashamed

Tech Wise Family: 9&10. Why Singing Matters & In Sickness and in Health

Future Faith: Challenge Four: Perceiving the World as Sacred

Emptying creation of its intrinsic, sacred value, derived from the life of the Creator, now threatens the actual sustainability of the planet’s life-supporting systems.

The eclipse of creation and the subjugation of life to capitalist imagination is also the eclipse of the sacred. The natural world as a community of kindred subjects and the bearer of mystery and spirit is nostalgia, if a memory at all. When everything is for sale, the numinous is leeched away like water from sand. Awe and wonder fade as the full drama of life in the natural world—death and renewal, birth and rebirth, life lost and emergent—eludes our waking hours. Rich though we be as consumers, as creatures who belong body and soul to the cosmos we are paupers.

The heart of the crisis lies in humanity’s distorted relationship to the creation and its Creator.

This has not always been so. Nor is the relationship between humanity and creation perceived in this way throughout much of the non-Western world, including those areas where Christianity is growing with explosive speed. The church that has dominated Western society, with its wedding to Enlightenment thought and the unforgiving capitalist exploitation of nature, now faces a task of theological reconstruction if it truly believes that “God so loved the world . . .” (John 3:16).

Human redemption can only be understood as part of the redemption of the whole creation.

“the creative energy of God is the true being of all that is; matter is that spirit or energy in physical form. Therefore, we should regard our human environment as the energy of God in a form that is accessible to our senses.”

Such understandings of “cosmic” incarnation and redemption found expression in the Eastern church in early church fathers such as Gregory of Nyssa. Those voices were less prevalent in the Western church, but with some very prominent exceptions. Saint Francis of Assisi was most notable, of course, extolling the familial harmony—“Brother Sun, Sister Moon”—of creation’s web as the embodiment of God’s love. Saint Bonaventure, who followed Francis as a formative leader of the Franciscan order, described God as “within all things but not enclosed; outside all things but not excluded; above all things but not aloof; below all things but not debased. . . . [W]hose center is everywhere and whose circumference is nowhere.”

discussion guide

  • What historical developments in both society and the church have had an impact on how we view the sacred or holy in our modern world?
  • How do you respond to this quote by Larry Rasmussen: “Rich though we be as consumers, as creatures who belong body and soul to the cosmos we are paupers”? Do you agree that creation has been compromised by modern human action? Why or why not?
  • To what voices or perspectives does the author suggest we pay close attention? Why?
  • How would you complete this statement: The created world is _________.
  • What more do you want to learn or do based on reading this chapter of the book?

 

Previous posts can be found here:

Challenge One: Revitalizing Withering Congregations

Challenge Two: Embracing the Color of the Future

Challenge Three: Seeing through Non-Western Eyes

For more on this, please support the author and buy his book at Amazon or Fortress Press. I do not receive any compensation for this summary.

Future Faith: Challenge Three: Seeing through Non-Western Eyes

In 1980, for the first time in a thousand years, more Christians were living in the Global South than the Global North.

Christianity has now become predominantly a non-Western religion. It is moving out of the cradle of Western culture and the Enlightenment, which shaped and formed most of Christian faith for the last four hundred years. This means a commonly accepted way of thinking, with rules, models, and assumptions governing how we observe and interpret reality, is changing in unanticipated ways. We’re undergoing a major paradigm shift.

Attention must be placed on the startling fact that world Christianity has now become a non-Western religion. Today, Christianity is experiencing its greatest growth and vitality in cultures that historically have not been framed by the Western Enlightenment and secular modernity.

It’s no easy task to outline this major paradigm shift, a majority of the world’s Christians today live in cultures where they put on a different set of glasses to view and interact with the world.

Andrew Walls has spent much of his career in Africa studying the forms of emerging Christianity in that continent and then contributing to the overall study and understanding of world Christianity. Lamin Sanneh, once described Walls as “one of the few scholars who saw that African Christianity was not just an exotic, curious phenomenon in an obscure part of the world, but that African Christianity might be the shape of things to come.”

Andrew Walls says this: The most striking feature of Christianity at the beginning of the third millennium is that it is predominantly a non-Western religion. . . . We have long been used to a Christian theology that was shaped by the interaction of Christian faith with Greek philosophy and Roman law. . . . These forms have become so familiar and established that we have come to think of them as the normal and characteristic forms of Christianity. In the coming century we can expect an accelerated process of new development arising from Christian interaction with the ancient cultures of Africa and Asia, an interaction now in progress but with much further to go.

Lens One: The Individual and Community

Enlightenment thought focused on the primacy of the individual. Non-Western cultures, on the other hand, often begin with the primacy of the community. Religious faith, with both its traditions and belief structures, is almost impossible to comprehend apart from a shared community that also transcends barriers of time.

Lens Two: Rational and Supernatural Approaches to Knowledge

Insight into and contact with the nature of reality comes through legends and rituals, or dances and vision quests, which provide portals into spiritual realities upholding all life. Knowing truth through abstract thinking is a foreign concept in a world where one can touch reality through sacred lived experiences.

Lens Three: The Material and the Spiritual World

Enlightenment thought reinforced a clear boundary between the material and spiritual.

Cultures in the non-Western world typically assume a far more fluid and interconnected relationship between the material and the spiritual. Spiritual forces and realities, both good and evil, permeate the so-called material world. The origin and life of material objects are connected to spiritual forces.

For most of world Christianity, the movement out of the enduring, comfortable cradle of Western culture to the non-Western world entails a fundamental reorientation of how culture and faith interact in the process of theology around crucial issues involving how we understand truth and experience reality.

Seeing through Non-Western Eyes

The understanding and role of Christian faith within the diversity of non-Western cultures is the playing field for the most important theological work, in my view, in the twenty-first century.

For most Christians in the United States, all this represents entirely new terrain. We don’t recognize how thoroughly we’ve become trained to see the world through the eyes of the Western Enlightenment, with all its prevailing assumptions.

For the future of Christian faith, this will no longer work. For Christians of all theological persuasions formed by modern Western culture, an imperative of our journey is learning to see reality through non-Western eyes.

The truth is that the glasses of the Western Enlightenment that have framed our view of the world now obscure reality more than reveal it. We shouldn’t simply be curious about how others see the world but rather seek to understand how our own vision has been distorted. We need corrective lenses for the sake of shaping a resilient and clear vision within our own culture in this time of dramatically shifting paradigms for understanding the world. That is part of the promise of embracing the future of Christianity as a non-Western religion.

discussion guide

  • What major shifts in the church does the author describe in this chapter?
  • How would you define the word paradigm? What has been the prevailing paradigm in your faith community? Why might you wish to change this prevailing paradigm? Or not?
  • The author describes one important shift as seeing the world through a different set of lenses. What examples of these lenses does he provide? Which of these examples was particularly striking to you? Why?
  • Why does the author say we are at a “hinge point” in the history of global Christianity? From that hinge point, how does the author see the future?
  • What is your reaction to the author’s discussion of seeing through Native American or Indigenous Peoples’ lenses? How can you or your faith community benefit from these perspectives?
  • What more do you want to learn or do based on reading this chapter of the book?

 

 

Previous posts can be found here:

Challenge One: Revitalizing Withering Congregations

Challenge Two: Embracing the Color of the Future

For more on this, please support the author and buy his book at Amazon or Fortress Press. I do not receive any compensation for this summary.