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Techno backlash: Cool kids are leading a technology revolt and unplugging gadgets in order to reconnect with one another, says major British newspaper The Independent. This has been predicted for sometime.1 But the thing that is important for youth ministry, the thing I want to highlight, is something that The Independent article glosses. What’s happening here is NOT a backlash against the disconnection produced by things that plugin; this is a backlash against the disconnection that our society fosters whether plugged in or unplugged. The 20th century was largely about assuming that technology is the answer to societal woes. It’s not, but neither is disconnecting from technology. The technology isn’t the issue.

The church gets caught up in this frenzy as well: Should we include or exclude technology from ministry and worship? Even Emergent churches get caught in this trap. Unfortunately, inclusion and exclusion discussions aren’t the heart of the matter because they’re responses to the wrong issue. The real issue is a matter of disconnection from self, others and the divine. The real issue is much deeper than technology; it’s one that the church in its true missional fullness is called to respond to by offering communion with God and others — something which technology or the exclusion of technology can’t fix. Unfortunately, we’re often too busy arguing about Powerpoint backgrounds and whether there should be a projection screen in the sanctuary to take notice of the deeper longing of the human soul that the church has been divinely equipped to respond to.

Sunday School for Atheists: Just when Christians were all but ready to give up on Sunday school (actually I gave up long ago), atheists are jumping on the bandwagon offering children lessons in humanist thought and apologetics. Read the Time magazine article.

Emerging Adulthood: Books and Culture has an interesting essay by sociologist Chris Smith on Jeffrey Arnett’s proposal of a developmental phase between adolescence and full adulthood called emerging adulthood. The concept is a few years old, but it really appears to be taking off. Emerging adulthood appears to be the new de facto way of referring to 18 to 25 year olds in recent articles I’ve read in the Journal of Adolescence and elsewhere.

  1. The last time I heard a prediction like this was by Zach Suchin, CEO of College Tonight during The Millenials conference in NYC. Also, keep in mind that this involves a minor subset of youth and is a trend that’s not likely to go mainstream. One of the things I know well from my days in journalism is that the status quo doesn’t sell newspapers, so as journalists we have to cover the new and novel regardless of how minor the movement may be. []