Posted by
Rob Stevenson on Saturday, November 10, 2007 5:11:44 PM
Rob Stevenson for New
Media Connection
www.newmediaconnection.org
The most influential bloggers in the English-speaking world
came together with the best of new media technology companies last Thursday and
Friday. The delegates included Hugh Hewitt, Roger L. Simon of Pajamas Media,
Yahoo, Townhall.com and all the other predictable big names in the blogosphere,
but one group was unique in its heavy religious views and united sense of
mission. Given these demographics, what brings fifty-nine born-again Christians
to the Las Vegas Strip?
GodblogCon does. This year’s GodblogCon, the third annual
meeting of the minds for Christians in the blogosphere broke new ground,
combining with The BlogWorld and New Media Expo in its inaugural conference
November 8th&9th, in Las Vegas, NV.
That said, why is Al Mohler leading the all-star team of
Christian blogging on a “D-Day” invasion of a secular trade show for new media
technologies? The answer lies in a simple analysis of the history of Christian
media influence, and few guesses at its future.
By the 1920s, the emerging suburb Hollywood, CA
was bustling with Cecil B. DeMille and D.W. Griffith pioneering a new medium:
the motion picture. On the cutting edge of media tech was the Bible Institute
of Los Angeles (BIOLA). With one of the first and most influential radio
stations of the time and a drive to push their message to the forefront of
cultural thought, they embarked on a mission to saturate their culture with
intelligent fundamentalism, goals that echo in the evangelical movement to this
day. It was only natural for BIOLA to take the helm and play the lead role in
the creation of Hollywood.
Then tragedy struck. Many Christians, appalled by ‘sinful’
movies and a culture moving ‘to hell in a hand basket,’ left the industry,
boycotted the movement and complained about inappropriate content. Pious or
impious, I will not judge. Suffice to say, this move was stupid.
Decades later, Hollywood
has flourished without Christianity. Sitting on the sidelines bewailing the
‘inevitable’ didn’t stop the movies, but it did excommunicate smart Christians
from positions of power. This mistake cost us the greatest tool of cultural
influence in the twentieth century.
As we step anew into the third millennium, we are bound and
determined to learn from our mistakes. The internet will provide pornography, intolerance,
deception and hate, but it will provide these regardless of our compliance. It
is for us, the Church, rather, to take our rightful seat at the table of new
media and wield such influence as we may attain, directing the future of our
culture to the Glory of God.
Today 12 students from Biola
University are driving home from a
week in Las Vegas.
They do so in an attitude of celebration, knowing that by their small actions the
world will be a better place: a place where God is not ghettoized to niche
markets, but shouted from the highest rooftops of the technological world.
Those who stand in the way of our cause will continue to address the culture,
but they will not do so alone. As long as GodblogCon continues to meet, the
Christian voice will be heard, and a small cadre of evangelicals will always be
in the arena to stand for the message of the gospel.
We will not be silent.