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Bishop James Brown, also know as Bishop I Feel God, serves as the Founder and Senior Pastor of Victory International Church in the southwest section of Fort Worth, Texas. Along with his partner for life Pastor Linda Brown the powerful duo minister to the "up and out", as well as, "the down and out".

Believing that the church must be innovative and creative in order to reach this end time generation, Bishop Brown is active in utilizing and implementing technology for the spread of the Gospel. Having attended Michigan State University, he applies his expertise as a software engineer for the kingdom of God. From internet web sites to CD duplication to print publications, Bishop Brown stands at the forefront of technological innovation for the kingdom of God.

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How Do You Apply What We Know About Internet Usage to Your Spiritual Life

By admin | July 9, 2008

How Do You Apply What We Know About Internet Usage to Your Spiritual Life

I recently saw the post below on Owen Strachan Consumed Blog and it really set my mind to considering how I search and use the internet.

Having been on the internet since Al Gore created it, the way that I use the resources have changed substantially over the years.  In the beginning it was a source in detailed and in-depth research information about the interworkings of the latest cpu layout and all that went with that.

As time went on it morphed into a quick resource for finding driver layouts and scripture resources as I evolved from a SW Engineering techie type into a pastor and church leader.  As I progressed so did the internet.  It continued to become easier to use.  I remember when gopher meant something to netizens.

However, as the post indicates, I find myself devoid of in-depth intellectual research. Instead I find myself rushing to find supporting quotes, stories, and resources for my next sermononic indeavor.  I am quite sure I miss the mark and have become more shallow in my theology as a result.

But it is all to easy to do, isn’t it? All to easy to abandon the needed in favor of the expedient.

What are your insights about this?  Is Google making us stupid?  Maybe so.  But what may be more problematic for believers is whether it is causing us to retreat into spiritual isolation and dullness.  Is our salt still salty?

What do you think

 In Him,
JMb <><

Bishop James ‘I Feel God’ Brown
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Applying What We Know About Our Internet Usage to Our Spiritual Lives

Just had a few thoughts from yesterday’s piece that covered the Atlantic Monthly article, “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” The article is, I think, a good wake-up call for those of us who frequently browse the Internet. In particular, I think that it encourages us not to compartmentalize our lives. By this I mean that we should not think that our Internet usage is cordoned off from our spiritual lives. What does this mean on a practical level? Let me share.

Yesterday’s post touched on a number of other concerns that I have regarding constant Web use by Christians. Today, though, I want to zero in on the problematic question of how our devotional life is affected by the Internet. Put simply, if in our usage of the Web we are training ourselves to concentrate in ten-second bursts, we’re going to struggle, I think, to sustain a meaningful devotional life. Devotions are not essential to being a Christian. That is, you don’t have to have a thirty-minute time set aside each day for prayer and Bible study to be a Christian. However, most Christians throughout the ages have found that in order to walk closely with God on a daily basis, it is quite helpful to set aside time for these things. In our devotional time, we seek to focus for a period of time on God and His influence on our spiritual lives. Contemplation and thoughtfulness are thus at a premium when it comes to devotions.

Every Christian who has ever tried to do devotions knows that it’s hard to do them. Your attention wanders, your concentration drifts, and sooner than you can know it, you’re miles away from your church’s weekly prayer requests, or Jeremiah’s lamentations. How important, then, that in all of our lives, we cultivate mental habits that train us to focus, and not to flit. If you are constantly surfing the web, nibbling on content, I am guessing that you will find it challenging to dig into the Word. If you check email every ten minutes, I would venture that your concentration will easily shift from prayer to distracted thought. Why should it be otherwise? You’re training yourself to do just that–to shift.

In seeking to be wise, discerning, disciplined Christians, then, we’ve got to think hard not just about what we take in, but how we take it in. Most Christians are quite aware of the need to avoid bad Internet content. Few of us, I would guess, are aware of the need to avoid a bad approach to the Internet. As in many areas of life, we simply consume it like the masses around us, thinking little about its effect on our lives.

We should not allow the Internet to shred our devotional lives. If we do surf the Web and check email, we should do so carefully, such that we are capable of deep reflection and sustained attention. Our devotional lives can only be rich if we develop such abilities. Also, though, how can we expect ourselves and others to pay attention to sermons and hymns if we’re constantly trafficking in information? If our personal devotional life will suffer from overexposure to the Internet, so too will our congregational participation as members of churches. We’ll check in and out of sermons, tune out of the very songs we’re singing, and generally regard church with a glazed-over boredom, all the while unaware that it is not church and its offerings that are the problem–it is us and the attention spans we have trained to flit and flicker and fade in and out that are the problem. Shame on us for so often blaming the church and the pastor when it is almost solely we who are to blame.

Do you exhibit these symptoms? I know I do at times. If so, train your senses. Re-think your Internet consumption. Carve out within yourself the ability to focus and think deeply. Your spiritual life–and your church life–can only benefit as a result, and God can only be glorified as another area of one’s life opens up to the transforming power of God’s Word.

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