"Yes. I assume the computer you
are holding there was probably not built by Christians, and I hope that
you are glorifying God as you tap away at it. And of course out from
there, there are a 1000 things that we use all day long, and God says,
'whatever you do, whether you eat or drink, do all to the glory of God.'
And he knows that you are eating this meat that may have been
sacrificed to idols, so that means it was probably butchered by an
unbeliever, or handled by an unbeliever, shipped by an unbeliever, it
may have been cooked by an unbelieving cook. And here you are savoring
the product of all those unbelievers' work because you are in that
moment giving thanks to God for it, recognizing that the earth is the
Lord's and the fullness thereof and taking the strength and the joy that
comes from it to render back to him.
Now with the arts and with
media it is more morally complex than with food. But it is the same
principle. The complexity of it is, in those moments what do you do with
the moral elements of it that are so contrary to your faith?
I'll
just point out one principle because we can talk about this forever.
What concerns me is the distinction between entertainment and cultural
analysis. To watch something, to study the culture, learn from the
culture, be more able to interact with unbelievers for the sake of the
glory of Christ is one thing. To just sit and bask in nudity, or bask in
fifty f-words, or bask in a world view that is shot through with
arrogance to the core, and enjoy it? Hmm. That seems to point to
something going on in the heart. And frankly, I have tasted it big time.
I think today we are going to have to work at not being shaped by the
world because the world has made its world view so scintillatingly
attractive.
Movie after movie after movie has come out and most
young reformed people are, I would say, indiscriminate. "Let's go to a
movie tonight." OK, and then we just choose the best. None of the movies
in that theater at that night are any good, probably. But you are just
going to do it, because that is what you do. You go to the movies on
Friday night, or whatever. And then of course you think, we've got to
Christianize this thing somehow.
I just think we need to test our
hearts big time. Big time. Why are we able to enjoy hell bound, God
ignoring, Christ dishonoring, false world views because we can give it a
little twist at the end that it taught us this or that about the world?
So, I think the main thing I'm saying there is, test your heart as to
whether entertainment is defaulting to the world, or to something more
wholesome. We live in an age where we tend to default to the world for
entertainment."
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