Back in the old days—so I’m told—Christians used to compete with one another to see who could reject culture the most. Sometimes this was good and necessary.
For example, whatever you think of the temperance movement of the early 1900s, there is no doubt that it addressed a massive social problem—widespread public drunkenness and addiction to alcohol.
Sometimes to embrace a good thing, such as a faithful walk with Christ, we must first reject a bad thing. But sometimes we reject things that maybe we shouldn’t, because rejecting them means cutting ourselves off from contact with people who need to hear about Jesus.
Now I’ve made a big deal about not having enough Christians in the arts telling our stories, based of course on the Greatest Story Ever Told, to a culture that’s unknowingly starving for the True, the Good, and the Beautiful.
And as I mentioned recently on BreakPoint, our culture makers seem to be running out of fresh ideas, so they keep recycling the old stuff. Take the commercially successful but artistically vacuous Star Wars remake, for example.
Continue reading BreakPoint – Critiquing Culture for Christ and Our Neighbor