Sabbatical, Day 73: Morality On The Real-Time Web

Let’s begin with a couple of links. Firstly, opening up TweetDeck this morning, I found a link from Robert Scoble that Christians will want to think about. It comes from yesterday’s Daily Telegraph: Twitter and Facebook could harm moral values, scientists warn. The headline is rather sensationalist, because this is not merely about Twitter and Facebook. It’s about the general speed at which we receive information in an Internet culture that is rapidly moving into the age of the ‘real time Web‘.

The big issue is the lost time for reflection. To take one quote from the article:

“If things are happening too fast, you may not ever fully experience emotions about other people’s psychological states and that would have implications for your morality,” said Mary Helen Immordino-Yang, from the University of Southern California, and one of the researchers.

Elsewhere, the article says,

The volunteers needed six to eight seconds to fully respond to stories of virtue or social pain, but once awakened, the responses lasted far longer than the volunteers’ reactions to stories focused on physical pain.

We don’t even get six to eight seconds – and that’s rapid in comparison to Christian traditions of reflection and contemplation! Put this together with the information overload possible from the Net – I’d love to edit down the number of entries I have in Google Reader but they all seem soooo important – and we have a serious problem. 

So here are a couple of questions I thought I’d put up for discussion:

1. How do you tackle the need for time and reflection in a the fast-moving world of the Internet?

2. What approaches do you find helpful in prioritising the best and most relevant online sources from the abundance available?

For a second link, let’s have a lighter note. Having written recently about the difficulties of explaining why last Friday was Good to the children, here is an approach they would have loved, had we lived nearer. On Good Friday evening, there was a novel way to observe the Stations of the Cross, using railway stations in Wales. (HT to John and Olive Drane.)

…………

After discovering these two links this morning, I set off for my once-every-eight-weeks visit to the osteopath. The plantar fasciitis is nearly gone from my foot, largely thanks to the exercises he prescribed. He also said my body was reacting better to treatment. He thought that might be the sabbatical, because I wasn’t being drained of energy by the usual daily grind. (And whatever you might say about ministry and vocation, it contains a reasonable selection of grind.)

However, he traced some neck pain to my right shoulder and wondered about my posture on that side. Did I use a computer? Yes, I said, but I operate the mouse with my left hand. What about the phone? Yes, being left-handed I hold a phone in my right hand so I can write with my left. Nothing wrong witih that. Except when I need to cradle the phone between my ear and my neck on the occasions I am using both hands. When would that be? Ah, that would be when I am cooking at tea-time and my mother rings up. I need a quiet word with her. And I need the self-discipline not to answer when I see Mum and Dad’s number come up on the phone screen in Caller ID.

…………

Finally tonight, it’s about time I told another story about the children. I know you wouldn’t guess I’m a proud Dad, would you? I know these stories are precious to all parents; I can only say they seem all the more so to Debbie and me, since we only entered that category in our forties.

Anyway … Rebekah(6) and Mark (4 1/2) were in the bath tonight. Rebekah is a bright girl, but has to demonstrate her mental superiority over her brother from time to time. Intellectually, he is catching her up and passing her in some respects. She began asking him to do some sums. 

“What’s eight plus eight?” she demanded.

“Sixteen,” he replied quickly.

“Correct!” said Rebekah. “What’s sixteen plus sixteen? Don’t count out loud!”

A moment later: “Thirty-two!”

“Did you know the answer, Rebekah?” I enquired.

“No.”

No wonder he doesn’t want to spend time with children his own age, only older children and adults. It means problems for his socialising, but at the same time Daddy is proud that his son is showing the same childhood interest in Maths.

Sabbatical, Day 18

Thank you to everyone who has offered prayers and advice regarding Mark’s illness. He has now been clear of vomiting for two days, but the problem has moved to the other end. He remains reluctant to eat, which brings back all the fears of the two years (only recently ended) during which he barely picked at food. However, it could just be the bug. He also remains pretty tired.

Today, I drove to Kent and picked up Rebekah from her sleepover. She had been rather subdued, but was much closer to her usual more-bouncy-than-Tigger self today. Pat, her old childminder, has come to stay with us for two days.

On the way back, we were coming over the new bridge-like slip road from the A2 to the M25 when we hit one of those first-gear-if-you’re lucky traffic jams. It did not surprise us remotely when it cleared the moment we got through the tolls at the Dartford Crossing. Tolls were introduced here with the south-to-north tunnels and the north-to-south Queen Elizabeth II bridge. Once the bridge was paid for, they were due to be abolished.

But governments are good at lying. Or at least of playing along with a previous administration’s policy, and then changing when it suits them. So, as is well known, once the crossing was paid for, the tolls were kept in place. Now it is supposedly a congestion charge. So let’s just call that the lie that it is. When the tolls cause traffic to stack up in the way they do, fuel consumption worsens badly. Therefore they do not save environmental damage, they cause more pollution. It can hardly be argued that the tolls work by deterring people from taking that route and that if they were abolished more people would use it for two reasons. Firstly, those on the route often have little practical alternative. Secondly, the few who might change would be on the roads anyway. No, the Dartford tolls only increase greenhouse gas emissions and human tempers. So let’s just call the government a big fat teller of porkies. I know people will find it hard to believe in a dishonest government, but there you go.

So little has happened on sabbatical topics today. However, I have just noticed this report on the BBC News site: the Vatican says that the two sexes ‘sin in different ways’. Never mind personality differences, there are sex differences in terms of preferences for the classic seven deadly sins. For women, the popularity of sins comes in the following order:

1. Pride
2. Envy
3. Anger 
4. Lust
5. Gluttony
6. Avarice
7. Sloth.

For men, it is 

1. Lust
2. Gluttony
3. Sloth
4. Anger
5. Pride
6. Envy
7. Greed.

So now you know. The top three in the men’s list sounds very much like the profile for certain seedy men’s magazines, such as Zoo and Nuts (which I’m not going to dignify with links).

The Vatican is reacting to a decline in the practice of personal confession. One third of Catholics no longer consider confession to a priest necessary, and one in ten consider it an obstacle to their relationship with God. All this, despite the fact that the Catholic Catechism still states that 

“immediately after death the souls of those who die in a state of mortal sin descend into Hell”.

The objections to confession sound vaguely similar to traditional Protestant objections to the rôle of a mediator between humans and God other than Jesus Christ. All this at a time when some streams and traditions emanating from Protestantism are rediscovering the importance of accountability groups, which may not have the formalised place for the priest, but which can respect the injunction in the Letter of James that we should confess our faults to one another. I don’t suppose we’re going to wave to each other as we pass one another going in the opposite directions, but isn’t this one of those cases where it would be good to listen carefully to one another and pick out strengths and weaknesses from the various traditions? 

Finally tonight, something that should have drawn a comment from me yesterday. I visit an osteopath every couple of months, as I have previously written. Yesterday, I saw Tom again. In addition to treatment for my usual neck and back issues, I mentioned that a practice nurse at our doctor’s surgery had recently diagnosed some pain in my heel as plantar fasciitis.

Tom being Tom, he not only proceeded to treat it and give me some exercises to do, he launched into an explanation of the condition and the physiology. He told me how the plantar fascia is like a mesh that changes shape, tensing and relaxing, in relation to the movement of the foot and pressure on it, and said something about energy storage that I confess I don’t now understand. He explained how the fascia is linked to the calf muscle. When the latter is tight all the time, it puts strain on the plantar fascia. Therefore, he prescribed some gentle stretching exercises for the calf muscle that would release it and therefore relieve the plantar fascia. He said that unless we started to work quickly, the condition would set in for months and months. 

In the midst of the explanation about how things should work in this part of the body, Tom suddenly said, “He thought of everything, didn’t he?” Now Tom knows my profession and has dropped hints before about believing in God. It was he and not my previous, Christian, osteopath, who told me that the discipline was founded by a Christian, Andrew Taylor Still. However, one thing Tom has never suggested to me that he is a Christian or a disciple of any other faith.

I imagine he might be one of the many who hold to a belief in God without ‘formalising’ it, but my concern here is less with theorising about his convictions. My point is that I wasn’t ready, even within a friendly, warm relationship to make an appropriate response. Sometimes I am so into building a good relationship with someone and avoiding the preachiness of my Christian youth that when an opportunity for spiritual conversation comes up, I blow it. Someone must know how to keep a good balance!

Touching The Father’s Heart Conference

Today and yesterday I’ve been attending the Touching The Father’s Heart Conference for Methodist leaders organised by the Ignite Revival Network, featuring John and Carol Arnott of the Toronto Airport Christian Fellowship and Scott McDermott of Washington Crossing United Methodist Church. Much could be said about what happened – see the testimony page on Ignite’s site in the next few days. But in the meantime here are some of the significant things that happened to me when people prayed for me:

1. Carol Arnott spoke yesterday afternoon about ‘soaking prayer’. Talking about a gift of some pearls, she described the way pearls are formed as the grit is coated over a period of time. I was prayed for, ended up doing ‘carpet time’, and longed to feel God’s presence and love but can’t in all honesty say I did. I prayed, “Lord, what are you doing?” I felt him say, “I am coating you.”

2. I regularly see an osteopath about a problem with my neck but it has also been noticed that I have a problem with stiff muscles attached to my left hip. When I lie on my back the left foot doesn’t tilt out to the left as it should, it is more or less vertical. The osteopath told me this needed dealing with or I would have problems in twenty years’ time. I had had a couple of brief manipulations and some minor improvement had occurred. However whilst flat on my back doing carpet time yesterday and today I noticed the foot had pretty much gone to the proper angle. And I had not sought prayer about this.

3. This morning Andrew Baguley asked for people to receive prayer for ear problems. Debbie, my wife, has had an awful ear infection for nearly two weeks now which may just be connected with our water tank problem. She’s on her third set of antibiotics and in constant pain, sleeping very little – even worse when you have two very small children as we do. I went out and asked for prayer for her. It was a great encouragement to find that the man praying for me had seen his own wife healed of a hearing disorder, not an instant healing but ultimately a complete one. I ended up on the floor again. Whilst there I prayed, “Lord, I want my wife back” (she just hasn’t been her usual extravert self during this condition). I felt him say, “You can have her back” and then saw a picture where she was bound in something like twine and I was cutting her free. When the final piece of twine was cut she jumped for joy. I have to say that upon arriving home this afternoon I found she was no better physically. But I do now have the faith that she will be restored.

Touching The Father’s Heart Conference

Today and yesterday I’ve been attending the Touching The Father’s Heart Conference for Methodist leaders organised by the Ignite Revival Network, featuring John and Carol Arnott of the Toronto Airport Christian Fellowship and Scott McDermott of Washington Crossing United Methodist Church. Much could be said about what happened – see the testimony page on Ignite’s site in the next few days. But in the meantime here are some of the significant things that happened to me when people prayed for me:

1. Carol Arnott spoke yesterday afternoon about ‘soaking prayer’. Talking about a gift of some pearls, she described the way pearls are formed as the grit is coated over a period of time. I was prayed for, ended up doing ‘carpet time’, and longed to feel God’s presence and love but can’t in all honesty say I did. I prayed, “Lord, what are you doing?” I felt him say, “I am coating you.”

2. I regularly see an osteopath about a problem with my neck but it has also been noticed that I have a problem with stiff muscles attached to my left hip. When I lie on my back the left foot doesn’t tilt out to the left as it should, it is more or less vertical. The osteopath told me this needed dealing with or I would have problems in twenty years’ time. I had had a couple of brief manipulations and some minor improvement had occurred. However whilst flat on my back doing carpet time yesterday and today I noticed the foot had pretty much gone to the proper angle. And I had not sought prayer about this.

3. This morning Andrew Baguley asked for people to receive prayer for ear problems. Debbie, my wife, has had an awful ear infection for nearly two weeks now which may just be connected with our water tank problem. She’s on her third set of antibiotics and in constant pain, sleeping very little – even worse when you have two very small children as we do. I went out and asked for prayer for her. It was a great encouragement to find that the man praying for me had seen his own wife healed of a hearing disorder, not an instant healing but ultimately a complete one. I ended up on the floor again. Whilst there I prayed, “Lord, I want my wife back” (she just hasn’t been her usual extravert self during this condition). I felt him say, “You can have her back” and then saw a picture where she was bound in something like twine and I was cutting her free. When the final piece of twine was cut she jumped for joy. I have to say that upon arriving home this afternoon I found she was no better physically. But I do now have the faith that she will be restored.

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