Net Neutrality

In case you missed it while surfing the net or at least where your ISP wants you to surf and shop, here is part of a joint statement about the newest proposal from Verizon and Google on “net neutrality.”

Google and Verizon Pact Worse Than Feared
by Media Release | Free Press

Washington – In response to Google and Verizon’s “policy framework” unveiled today, MoveOn.Org Civic Action, Credo Action, the Progressive Change Campaign Committee, ColorofChange.org and Free Press, all members of the SavetheInternet.com Coalition, issued the following joint statement:

“The Google-Verizon pact isn’t just as bad as we feared — it’s much worse. They are attacking the Internet while claiming to preserve it. Google users won’t be fooled.

“They are promising Net Neutrality only for a certain part of the Internet, one that they’ll likely stop investing in. But they are also paving the way for a new ‘Internet’ via fiber and wireless phones where Net Neutrality will not apply and corporations can pick and choose which sites people can easily view on their phones or any other Internet device using these networks.

“The almost Christian formation of teens.”

This article by Kenda Creasy Dean offers an interesting review of the symbiotic relationship of culture and Christianity.  Some of her words convict as well as resonate with me.  Though she is more Christocentric than I, nevertheless, her critique of what is happening in many congregations is on point, dare I say prophetic, as well as the work of the National Study of Youth and Religion and the primary investigators Smith and Denton.  They identify what they call “Moralistic Therapeutic Deism” as the symbiote devouring host Christianity that is more about consumption than spirituality.  This is a lengthy read for an online article, but worth the time.

Faith, nice and easy
The almost Christian formation of teens

by Kenda Creasy Dean

In short, the study provides a window on how American young people have learned a well-intentioned but ultimately banal version of Christianity that’s been offered to them in American churches. Most youth seem to accept this bland view of faith as all there is—as something nice to have, like a bank account, something you have in case you need to draw from it in the future. What Christian adults have not told them is that this account of Christianity is bankrupt. We have not invested in their accounts: we “teach” young people baseball, but we “expose” them to faith. We provide coaching and opportunities for youth to develop and improve their pitches and their SAT scores, but we blithely assume that religious identity will happen by osmosis and will emerge “when youth are ready” (a confidence we generally lack when it comes to, say, algebra). The result? Teenagers who don’t have the soul strength necessary to recognize, wrestle with and resist the symbiotes in our midst—probably because we lack this strength ourselves.