Shane Hipps second book Flickering Pixels is not merely insightful, it is important. Hipps succeeds in taking some very complex topics--brain function, mass communication, the history of theology--and he packages them in an accessible, truly fresh study for everyone.
It is clear to many that our world has changed in the last few decades. All ages experience conflict and movement, but ours is an age in which fundamental assumptions about knowledge, ethics, and what it means to be human are being radically deconstructed and rebuilt. A primary reason may be that "images and icons are fast displacing words as the dominant communication system of our culture."
This has immediate relevance to a conversation taking place among younger Christians, some of whom push hard for a more empirical experience of their faith--doing radical charity work, creating environments that have mystical feel, emphasizing their body in worship through a primary focus on the sacraments, prayers, worship, and communal experiences with a lessening emphasis on teaching and left brain activities. The conversation in this camp seems to be, "How can we create environments in which our friends encounter and are made aware of Jesus?"
The other camp has becoming increasingly doctrinally focused. This camp emphasizes right thinking and even dogmatic specificity. I heard one such speaker boast on how many young people were coming to his events and leaving with his favorite book of systematic theology in their hands. For this man, this was a huge win. The conversation in this camp seems to be how do we get younger people to affirm a set of beliefs, to dig really deep, and perhaps begin to be interested in and engaging the theology of a Calvin, or Spurgeon, or Augustine.
Shane's book is essential reading for both camps. For the former because such ministries are often working purely from intuition or at best some ethereal post-modern philosophy few of them actually understand. And for the latter because the human beings they think they are communicating with are ceasing to exist. That's right. People now are fundamentally different than they were 100 years ago.
Hipps argues that the media all around us is not simply changing the way we get our news, entertainment, and sports. Computers, televisions, and movie screens "repattern the neural pathways in our brain[s]", and as such, the media through which we get information is reshaping us.
When he speaks to the history of theology, Hipps observes that "[in the Reformation] linear reasoning became the primary means of understanding and propagating faith. This led to a belief that the gospel could be established and received only through reason and facts. Printing makes us prefer cognitive modes of processing while at the same time atrophying our appreciation for mysticism, intuition, and emotion." But as our culture transitions, the flickering pixels are "simply opposed to the pathways required for reading, writing, and sustained concentration." Which leaves us with a real challenge when--those of us involved in teaching--begin to ask what it looks like to communicate to younger, right-brain dominant students.
This is what Shane Hipps' book is about--and it is the beginning of a conversation the church at large must have, for it could be argued that the reason younger generations are absent from most American Christian communities is that such communities are force feeding them square peg messages for their round hole minds. As such, young people on mass are exiting churches, not because they would not devote their lives to Jesus, but because they do not speak the language, do not engage reality, do not understand what is most meaningful in the way most churches present information.
Hipps points out that the center of understanding Christianity for those conditioned by the printing press has been the letters of Paul and the Gospel of John--both theologically robust and filled with doctrine. Hipps rightly notes that for those who succeed in speaking to younger generations that center is shifting toward the synoptic gospels--Mark, Matthew, and Luke--which emphasize parables and the stories of Jesus' miracles and deeds. These gospels are more concerned with ethics and right behavior than propositions or detailed metaphysical arguments. This is a place to begin. Because for younger generations, the vital question "who are you following" is replacing that of "what do you believe." This results from their transformed brains, and the influence of the image based communication culture all around us.
Hipps work is of the epistemic shift taking place in common folks. If our culture continues down this path, right thinking, in general, will no longer be judged according to its logic, it will be judged pragmatically. The question that will be primary will no longer be "is this true" but "Does this belief produce good in our world," and if it does, then we will consider it valuable. We see this now. We are naturally drawn to the teachings of Gandhi, MLK, and the Dalai Lama--not because we know them to be brilliant, but because we know them to be good. The same of course is true of the sayings of Jesus, which continue to have power over even the most secular mind, not because of their potency but because of his example.
Whether or not this is good or arguably self-defeating is beside the point. The point is--it is happening. Arguing against it may be the worst possible step for a church already in decline.

Comments
The Church as the message
Mon, 04/27/2009 - 08:05 — Thomas B. Grosh IV (not verified)I'm interested in reading Flickering Pixels after I finish Seven* ...
Quick note, have you been following the work by Notre Dame Sociologist Christian Smith on Human Beings as Moral, Believing Animals: Human Personhood and Culture? He has a follow-up book coming out this summer, not mention his excellent exploration of Moralistic Therapeutic Deism in Soul Searching.
With regard to the conclusion of the review, it is important to ask the question upon what is the church founded:
The church is, says Hipps, an expression of the gospel. When we ask the question, what is God saying to our world? Look no further than the medium he is using—his church—for as is central to Hipps, “The medium is the message.”
Yes, we are becoming more like Christ as individuals and a community through our journey with the saints (across time and space), but a framework (or should I say perspective/lens/confession of faith) guided by the Spirit and grounded in the Word as understood by the people of God through history is vital to not being persuaded other ways which claim to be noble, true, good. For example, the one offered by the campus missionaries from the Church of Latter Day Saints which I met last week. Please forgive me for sharing this long illustration, but the encounter's fresh in my mind.
Last week I passed two elders chatting w/a student on the sidewalk outside of a mainline denominational church adjacent to a moderate size state university. Was it the Spirit, my compassion for the young woman, and/or my desire for dialogue which led me to turn around and enter the conversation? Note: My 30 minute conversation caused me to be 25 minutes late for a discussion with some faculty, but I'm just a guest. They do quite fine without me being present ;-)
My first question to the elders was whether they were part of the church they were standing in front of (No). Second, I asked whether they considered themselves Christians and believed Jesus to be the Son of God (Yes). Third, would they agree as to what Christianity was with the church we stood in front of ... In response, the elders turned their attention to the Prophet Joseph Smith and the contents of the Book of Mormon which broke the power of apostasy in the church, present since the passing away of the apostles.
I asked whether they trusted the Bible (Yes) and if so what they did with the writings by apostates (they affirmed Paul as an Apostle, i.e., one who saw/heard from God, but equivocated on the value of writings by Mark, Luke, Jude). They were willing to admit some light passed on to Timothy, Silas, Titus, Philemon, Corinth, Galatia, Ephesus, Philippi, Colossae, Thessalonica. ... But without a Prophet (i.e., Apostle, one who had seen God) apostasy had taken the church well before the Church counsels which wrote the creeds and selected the canon. Did they carry a Bible with them? (No, they confessed I had caught them red handed) I suggested they get in touch w/the Gideons. They remembered an encounter with them awhile ago, but had not seen them on campus for quite some time, which I believe is probably the case. I wish that I had a pocket Bible with me to share, I'll be sure to have one in my bag for next time.
In addressing how some light would be taken into the Spirit world (after our death), they developed space for some Christians in the early church and beyond starting off further ahead in their Spirit world journey.
They wrapped up with asking whether I had a personal experience with God (note: the woman had checked out already). I answered yes. But the elder continued by sharing how he had been raised in the Church of Latter Day Saints, but chose his own path. Since his return to the church, he has experienced joy and fellowship unlike any other time in his life. In summary, that's why he was on campus sharing about The Book of Mormon. He passed along a The Book of Mormon and tract on Jesus. They wanted to know what I thought.
I pointed them back to reading the New Testament through the lens of the work of God the Father through his Son and the gift of the Holy Spirit, initiating a kingdom/church which not only spreads through the apostles, but is passed on from generation to generation. They gave me their contact information and asked if they could connect with me again (possibly) and pray for me (yes and I for them).
Returning to the point, we must be wary of believing just because something sounds good, feels right, we were raised in the community of, and/or enables us to hang with an entertaining crowd. No doubt these can be good doors by which to enter/consider various perspectives, but upon what is our understanding of good, emotions, and proper community based? No doubt there is an aspect of truth to The medium is the message, but from what is the medium birthed (what appears to be an earlier theme in the book)? We may require both some reformation in our approach to the Word and our culture. Let's be embraced by and follow the over-arching Biblical story with a deep rooted confidence stemming from hiding the Word in our hearts and wrestling with the Word as a Spirit-led community incarnating the Word to the glory of God the Father in a complex, changing world. Wish I had more time to sharpen this, but gotta go ... looking forward to some of your thoughts, shred away ;-)
*Which by the way has been really helpful in counseling my 9 year old twin girls and in clarifying some of my reflections on "The Screwtape Letters" I'm writing.
To Tom
Tue, 04/28/2009 - 15:44 — jeffHey Tom,
Thanks for your post.
Question - What is your reason for thinking the Bible worthy of your devotion, and are those reasons empirical?
Be well! Jeff