I've attended church with my family for my entire life,tamil cinema women eroticizing but I've noticed a stark change in the last few visits to our non-denominational Christian congregation: A startling number of people around me spent the sermons glued to smartphones and tablets.
Even my dad, a classic Midwestern disciplinarian, pulled out his iPhone and put it on his lap for easy access right as I was turning mine off for the first time that week. He and the others that I spotted through some good old-fashioned pew snooping weren't using their gadgets to scroll through Twitter or play Candy Crush, though — they were following along with the pastor in the pulpit as he read passages in the Bible, which happens often in non-denominational services focused on interpreting and applying scripture to daily life.
SEE ALSO: The nuns of Snapchat: the sisters offering teens a glimpse of convent lifeSmartphones are inescapable in nearly every facet of modern life, but for me, the church was the final, sacred, screen-free space. I work with tech every day, wear a smartwatch 24/7, and typically sleep with my phone, so I use service as an opportunity to meditate on faith with no chance of being interrupted by push notifications. I admit that I'm worried about succumbing to temptation, too; it would be all too easy to flick through Instagram to check out my friends' Sunday morning brunch pics instead of concentrating on the message.
Apparently, my tech-free worship policy is becoming uncommon. Faith and technology are far from incompatible — nuns are huge on Snapchat, y'all — but bringing an active link to the internet directly into the inner sanctum on the Sabbath, where the "earthly" world is actively pushed aside for communion with God, was jarring for me.
Unsurprisingly, Bible-centric apps have caught on with Christian audiences. Other faiths have their own apps for their holy books and ceremonies, too — but by far the most popular of them, YouVersion (nearly 300 million installations to date), is designed for Protestant Christians. The free app offers hundreds of digitized translations of the sacred text and more in an experience more akin to a modern lifestyle brand than a stuffy religious tome, replacing leather bound, gilded-paged King James version with the phones congregants already carry with them everywhere they go.
The popularity of the app would be astounding to someone like Martin Luther, who famously translated the text in the 16 century so common (literate) people outside of the clergy could read it. A free app is the ultimate realization of that effort to bring the Word to the masses, even if its potential impact isn't immediately apparent to those of us who've grown accustomed to living with the world's information at our fingertips.
The Gospels' message wasn't meant to be bound to the physical media on which it was transcribed, but the book has become a potent symbol in its own right. Part of my aversion to an app-based scripture experience is the veneration I have for the actual object — receiving a physical copy of the Bible was a rite of passage for kids in our congregation, and I remember memorizing verses to earn my own.
A modern Bible experience brings modern issues, too. YouVersion collects user data like location tags, verse highlights, and other info (like other apps, to be fair) and hasn't updated its privacy policy since 2012. There haven't been any reported security issues with the app and it doesn't bombard readers with ads, but users might be more willing to trust a faith-based app than a program from other publishers. That background doesn't mean that they're not in line for the same experience.
This gadget-filled worship phenomenon points to changing perspectives within communities of faith, which should be heartening to anyone worried by the dropping service attendance levels in the U.S. Modern life increasingly takes place online, and churches are making the jump, too.
In New York City, international megachurch Hillsong has a massive social media presence, and I often see snapshots friends post on Instagram from its locations that look like they came from an arena rock show. Those pics could be even more effective in drawing new congregants and the interest of nonbelievers than old-school evangelizing — the FOMO is real. My own more traditional church back home, Parkside, even streams sermons online, helping me feel like I haven't left the community even though I live hundreds of miles away.
I finally tried the YouVersion app for pre-bedtime devotions and scripture study, and its convenience and utility has won me over. I can jump from standalone chapters to devotional studies without skipping a beat, making it easier to study my faith at home where other distractions can totally throw me off.
One thing I'll never do, however, is use the app in the middle of a sermon in church. My congregation's pastor, Alistair Begg, agrees.
"I am not a fan of using digital devices in place of one’s Bible when listening to preaching," he told me via email. "There are enough distractions and hindrances without adding the temptation to check emails and text messages and sporting fixtures. Our Bibles, bearing our thumb prints and notes and quotes will be treasured by our grandchildren in a way that will never be true of our iPads."
Some things just need to stay sacred.
Topics Books
Can 'Game of Thrones' come to a satisfying end in Season 8?Did Tyrion betray Dany in the Game of Thrones Season 7 finale? Not yet.Dramatic video shows ocean waves on a Texas highway after Harvey'Overwatch' League's London team needs your help to figure out their nameThe story behind that inspiring picture of a human chain in HoustonAsia's newest mobile wallet may actually get the region to go cashless, finallyPepe the Frog's creator gets 'altSean Spicer finally lived his dream of meeting Pope FrancisUber's CEO is already offering up perfect sound bitesDigital therapy toy for stroke patients lights up for a game of whackInstagram now lets you post portrait and landscape photos in albumsThis toddler dressed up as the creepy clown from 'It' will haunt your dreams foreverRead Tim Cook's letter to employees about how Apple is contributing to Harvey reliefBrooklyn's unluckiest man gets leg stuck in world's smallest sinkholeJoel Osteen saga continues, says Houston didn't ask church to become a shelterJournalists cheer judge's decision to toss Sarah Palin's New York Times lawsuitPolice officer busts out extraordinary dance moves, gets hailed the 'undercover raver'Police officer busts out extraordinary dance moves, gets hailed the 'undercover raver'Want to see your match's face? This dating app makes you work for it.The future of Snapchat is in the dancing hot dog's hands Ladan Osman on Writing Poetry that Stays Close to Home Having Trouble Sleeping? Read the Ultimate Insomnia Cure. On Taylor Swift’s Passive Artist Rebecca Bird Sketches Donald Judd‘s Loft Building I Demand Satisfaction, and Other News Announcing the Winners of Our #ReadEverywhere Contest The Perfect Symmetry of Shaker Architecture The Plum Tree on West 83rd Street Shona Sanzgiri’s Photos of Havana—An Embarrassment of Riches Tatiana Trouvé’s “Desire Lines” Finds Art in Central Park Listen: An Archival Interview with Czeslaw Milosz At the Newsstand, Chivalry Is Most Surely Not Dead The Occult Experiments of Borges and Xul Solar Stanley Mouse and the Sixties Psych Bots Are Writing Poetry, So Humans Can Hang Up Our Hats How Men’s Magazines Changed Our Idea of Bachelorhood Richard Sharpe Shaver’s Theory on “Rock Books” Did the Erie Canal Change Our Vowel Sounds? Hart Crane’s Bizarre, Audacious Unpublished Poem The Treasure Maps of Pamela Singh
4.0516s , 10192.4375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【tamil cinema women eroticizing】,Information Information Network