
I'm amazed at the amount of time people spend on the internet. I'm not against technology, but all tools should be used to their best advantage. We should be spending our time on things that have staying power, instead of on the latest thought of the latest blogger-and then moving on quickly to the next blogger. That makes us more superficial, not more thoughtful.
---J. I. Packer
No, sadly, he does not have a point. If he had stopped with "We should be spending our time on things that have staying power..." he would not only have had a point, he would have offered us some very helpful and timely advice.
What we have here, I'm afraid, is an opinion on the order of the 4-year old who delivers himself of his judgment on spinach by throwing his spoon to the floor. I'd be inclined to give Dr. Packer a more patient hearing if I knew him regularly to tell people "we should spend our time on permanent things instead of reading the vapid opinions of church functionaries in the official organs of their religious institutions" or "we should be spending our time with those Samuel Davies called ‘the venerable dead' rather than wading through the swill and swagger of Christianity Today, Christian Century, Eternity, Leadership Journal, and World Magazine."
J.I. and his ilk have not given to my generation a very compelling example of a serious world of letters. Had they done that, bloggers would not have an audience.
You won't sell many rhinestones to people who already have diamonds.
Sorry, Dr. Packer, but it must be asked: have you been in a Christian bookstore in the last 20 years? Have you read the books your own publishers have marketed? Have you taken a fair sampling of the magazine that now quotes you?
Blogging is not the problem. The problem is much, much larger than that.
Let us be serious for just a moment, shall we? If you leave us a world full of Dan Rathers, don't be amazed to find bloggers; amazement is unbecoming.
There is not a place for us to look in this wide world where we don't see falsehood, hypocrisy, idolatry, and pretense. There is hardly a show, a commercial, an advertisement, a church ad, a magazine article, a religious publication, or weather report that isn't superficial about race, gender [sic], religion, beauty, happiness, piety or truth. In fact, yours is the generation above all others that has "branded" the truth. Why should you dare to be amazed that there is a reaction to this state of confusion?
My own advice is to see blogging for what it is: a necessary, an inevitable, and even a reasonable reaction to the shambles that was left us. Could blogging be done better? Of course it could; and I wish it were. We follow some blogs that are travesties of reason and crimes against language. But let's recognize blogging for what it is; when blogging is done right, it is a conversation where there was none. And I'll put some blog conversations I have seen up with anything found in the Letters Section of most magazines, certainly the religious magazines that have made your name well known.
Imagine a blogosphere populated with men like Swift, Pope, Milton, Herbert, Eliot, Chesterton, Muggeridge, Charles Williams, Barfield.... The fault is not with the blogging, the fault is the deformed and flabby Evangelicalism you left us. The real problem is a superficial Christianity.
Blogging is very much the unflattering consequence of your negligence toward "things that have staying power".
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