
It has been a decade since Christianity Today published my article, "Culture for Dummies: Ten Resources Christians Need for Understanding Today's World." Since that time, the Internet has become a dominant source of information, and social networking sites such as MySpace and YouTube were selected as Time magazine's "Person of the Year." We were in danger of being overwhelmed with information ten years ago. It is far worse, today. We cope by settling into our safe intellectual cliques—our favorite blog, cable channel, or online magazine— where our own views are reinforced and applauded. Without really trying, we can easily lose sight of the wider conversational horizon, and fail to listen to those who do not think as we do. It takes effort to maintain the big picture and to listen to those with whom we disagree.
Every pastor, teacher, parent, and mature apprentice of Jesus needs to develop cultural radar. We will find it hard to avoid being pressed into the world's mold, if we are unaware of or unreflective on its contours. The power of culture is that it hides its influence by becoming the unseen matrix of our lives. Consequently, leaders must develop a system of reading and reflection that helps them keep the big picture in view—to see the forest when trees seem to crowd out the light.
Cultural radar must be reasonable in its demands on time and money. It should be varied and broad in its perspective and not one-sided or specialized in its analysis. It will incorporate all aspects of cultural formation, including those outside one's interests or professional responsibility—politics, business, arts, and technology must all be covered. Elite culture must be balanced with popular culture, fringe with mainstream, and traditional with progressive.
There are some useful if more specialized and expensive publications such as The Chronicle of Higher Education, Adweek, Publishers Weekly, Variety, and Billboard which, depending on one's calling, one may find indispensable. Some of the information they provide can be accessed via their websites. Arts & Letters Daily, a service of The Chronicle of Higher Education, provides invaluable free access to important articles, book reviews, and essays.
There are also a number of bookstores that provide discernment not available at Amazon. Their websites, newsletters, and catalogues are valuable tools of cultural reflection. Here are four that are worth knowing about: Eighth Day Books, Splintered Light Bookstore, Hearts & Minds Bookstore and the Inklings Bookshop.
First steps to discernment
Here, then, are a few resources worthy of consideration. They are selected because they make connections between their particular area of focus and the wider culture. None demands specialized knowledge . . .
Few people have the time or resources to purchase or read all of these publications. Nonetheless, they remain important tools for cultural analysis and discernment. Denis Haack writes:
If anything is certain for Christians today, it's that we find ourselves living among people who do not share our deepest convictions and values. If we are to be faithful as Christians in such a pluralistic setting, we need to develop skill in discernment. An ability to respond winsomely to those who see things very differently than we do, instead of merely reacting to the ideas, values, and behaviour of the non-Christians around us. An ability, by God's grace, to creatively chart a godly path through the maze of choices and options that confront us, even when we're faced with situations and issues that aren't specifically mentioned in the Scriptures.
Disagreement is a mark of accomplishment since disagreeing requires our listening and understanding those with whom we disagree. Discernment is a spiritual discipline calling for the practical application of truth and love.
"Desperately needed": apprentices of Jesus who can disagree winsomely and live discerningly. Too often, we witness just the opposite.
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