Tweet this, Facebook that

What is my life worth?  Is it all based on the perception of “friends” who read my posts on Facebook?  Do I need to be sure they know how I really feel about my Lord or politics?  And, what if I don’t “copy and paste” into my status to prove my love and submission to God?

I find it interesting to read posts on Facebook these days.  Yes, there are friends who I envy because of the life of leisure they are now able to live (or that’s all they choose to post about.)  There are those who pass along helpful posts and links from renowned authors.  Friends let me know about the significant life milestones going on.  I read and cherish each one; really I do.

There are also a myriad of political and pseudo-spiritual diatribes being espoused as well.  While I support the right of everyone to have feelings, thoughts and opinions about the happenings of our world, I am growing weary of posts which fane the sickness of one political party or philosophy over another; the “we are better than you are” mentality of one thought-process over another; the “world is going to hell in a hand basket” if you support the other candidate opinions.

Some of this is to be expected during an election year.  I joined Facebook four years ago and wondered about this then.  In fact, reading some of the posts then influenced my stating my political views in status as the Nike brand’s “Just Do It.”  Yes, I am concerned about our nation and who is leading it; but short of a new revolution, I’m not sure much will change.  I am more convinced that expressing my opinions on Facebook will not actually influence a change.

I suspect, too, that whatever I choose to express will put me in the “de-friend” category from some of my closest Facebook friends.  So, why risk it?  I’ve just found a bunch of them after many years of separation and I rather enjoy catching up!

On the other hand, Twitter keeps life simpler—or shorter as the case may be.  If I “tweet” I am limited to 140 characters.  I couldn’t even finish this blog with that limitation!

I would rather live my life attempting to please the Lord; and to do that I don’t need Facebook, Twitter, or email (although many times I wish He would send my answer this way).  I don’t need current technology to report to Him my downfalls—He sees all and knows all.  I don’t need to report to Him that I agree with or disagree with the current popular “right” way of thinking.  What I suspect I do need to do is treat every person I meet with respect, dignity and love.  They need to see and hear Christ living through me.  “They’ll know we are Christians by our love.”

“No, nothing can separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.”  (Romans 8: 38 -39)

I’m going to eat my tuna fish salad sandwich on my back porch now.

 

Tommy is the husband of Rev. Susan Deal, Minister of Music at First Baptist Church Dalton, Georgia. Together they have survived 30 years of being a ministry couple and have raised and launched two sons who are ministers in churches in Kansas and North Carolina. Tommy is a consultant and coach with congregations and clergy with Pinnacle Leadership Associates and coordinates disaster response with Cooperative Baptist Fellowship of Georgia churches. Tommy has served as a public safety chaplain of fire departments and police departments in communities in which they have lived, and has been trained as a fire fighter and emergency medical responder.

Tagged with: , , , , , , , , ,
Posted in Faithful Living, Generational Differences, Ministry, Missiology, Social Issues, Spiritual Formation, Technology & Church
  • r s tiwari

    khursheed jaise naitikheen bhrashta neta jo apango ka paisa kha gaya jail jane me unhe garv mahsoos karana chahiye,

a blog site from abpnews.com

serving Christ by providing credible and compelling information about matters of faith

Loading

Subscribe to ABP Blog

Receive a weekly email summary of the latest posts


  • Texas mission worker dead at 32
    Mission Waco/Mission World director Seth Dorrell died unexpectedly of natural causes while on a mission trip to Mexico. […]
  • Internet video scrubbing alleged
    A blogger who three years ago revealed discrepancies in the testimony of a speaker popular in SBC circles says a lawyer is now trying to erase evidence of past lies from the Internet. […]
  • Moderates among Baptists 'Loving West'
     Congregations from across Texas are helping rebuild a city devastated by an April fertilizer plant explosion. […]
  • SBC president ending Boy Scout ties
    Fred Luter, the first black president of the Southern Baptist Convention, says his church is among those cutting ties with the Boy Scouts of America on moral grounds. […]
  • A recipe for blended worship
    Oil and water, obviously, will never mix. I have come to the same conclusion in these recent years of music ministry: that contemporary and traditional worship never mix -- well.   […]
  • The illogical politics of abortion
    Poor women are collateral damage in a war that anti-abortion activists launched against Planned Parenthood. […]
  • Re-imagining disability
    A new theology of disability envisions a Body of Christ where all have a place. […]
Categories
Last Tweets
Activity