The Gospel Coaltion Award of Distinction—Christian Living
Outreach Resource of the Year
The digital age is in the business of commodifying our attention. The technologies of our day are determined to keep us scrolling and swiping at all costs, plugged into a feedback loop of impatience, comparison, outrage, and contempt. Blind to the dangers, we enjoy its temporary pleasures, unaware of the damage to our souls.
Jay Kim's Analog Church explored the ways the digital age and its values affect the life of the church. In Analog Christian, he asks the same question of Christian discipleship. As the digital age inclines us to discontentment, fragility, and foolishness, how are followers of Jesus to respond? What is the theological basis for living in creative resistance to the forces of our day? How can Christians cultivate the contentment, resilience, and wisdom to not only survive but to thrive as we navigate the specific challenges of our age?
İçerik tablosu
Foreword by Dan Kimball
Introduction: Digital Smoke, Analog Air, and Fruit
Part I: Cultivating Contentment
1. Love Instead of Self-Centric Despair
2. Joy Instead of Comparison
3. Peace Instead of Contempt
Part II: Cultivating Resilience
4. Patience Instead of Impatience
5. Kindness and Goodness Instead of Hostility
Part III: Cultivating Wisdom
6. Faithfulness Instead of Forgetfulness
7. Gentleness Instead of Outrage
8. Self-Control Instead of Reckless Indulgence
Conclusion: Gardening in the NICU
Acknowledgments
Questions for Reflection and Discussion
Notes
Yazar hakkında
Dan Kimball (MA, Western Seminary) is the pastor of Vintage Faith Church in Santa Cruz, California, and currently working toward his Doctor of Ministry from George Fox Evangelical Seminary. He is the author of several books published by Zondervan including The Emerging Church (2003), Emerging Worship (2004) and They Like Jesus But Not the Church (2007). He also contributed to a book by the late Robert Webber in 2007 titled Listening to Beliefs of Emerging Churches (2007, Zondervan).