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10 years ago

American “pop culture” is indeed inescapable, as Ms. Buffington said, so we don’t need to make any great effort to “pay attention to what has people”™s attention.”
Yes, Paul was able to quote a poet, but too many Christ-followers use that one verse to justify soaking in godless entertainment for 20 hours every week.
This same Paul also instructed us, “…whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable””if anything is excellent or praiseworthy””think about such things.”
Are we allowing things that are not “pure” or “noble” to corrupt us?

I think even “Christian entertainment” can be hurtful to the cause of Christ because of the vast number of hours we indulge in it, while saying we don’t have time to make disciples.

Yes, we need to know a culture in order to effectively minister to it (a lesson I re-learned when we began our mission here in the Philippines), but we can know enough about culture by interacting with people.
Real people, not images on a screen.
When we consume tons of entertainment, we are influenced (often badly), but we don’t influence others.
When we interact with people, we learn, & they learn.

I’m a former music addict.
Now, I couldn’t care less if I’m “missing some really good music” (whether secular or Christian), because hearing new converts giving glory to God is music to my ears. 🙂

Justin Vest
10 years ago

I think this could use a companion piece highlighting the dangers of pop culture consumption, its inferiority to the pop culture of the past, and what to do to counteract its effects.

C.S. Lewis wrote that, for every “modern” book he read, he would read two significantly older ones. As Peter Falk’s character said to his grandson played by Fred Savage in The Princess Bride, “In my day, television was called BOOKS.”

In other words, one must read and consume the products of our past to counteract today’s prevailing zeitgeist. For example, roughly fifty years ago The Crystals had a monstrous hit called “And Then He Kissed Me” (nearly everyone knows it, I think the main character sang it to the opening credits of Adventures in Babysitting). The innocence of the lyrics, representative of its time, lie in stark, condemning contrast to the banality and base sensuality of what passes for a hit today.

This comment shows how fully immersed in pop culture I am, I realize, but one episode of The Walking Dead is enough to make me wonder how so many people could enjoy subjecting themselves to such oppressive hopelessness. Didn’t need to read beyond Book One of The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo series to wonder how such boring, pointless nihilism sold tens of millions of copies.

Pop culture need not be altogether shunned, but it requires a high degree of caution for believers. Compatibility between Christianity and popular culture is an historical aberration, and I’m afraid that period ended sometime in the eighties. I wish it were not so.

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