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Jason Byassee - Following: Embodied Discipleship in a Digital Age

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Jason Byassee Following: Embodied Discipleship in a Digital Age
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Offers theological reflection on the impact of technology on Christian discipleship, showing how new technologies and the rise of social media impact the way we interact with each other, our selves, and the world.

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Endorsements

This book embodies the Jesus way to see and be in the digital environment. Written as a partnership between a digital immigrant and a digital native, this book shows how the good news of Jesus affirms the good, critiques the dangers, and subverts some of the hidden assumptions of this new virtual land. It is therefore essential reading both for those who are disciples of Jesus and for those who want to know what twenty-first-century discipleship can be.

David Wilkinson , St. Johns College, Durham University

Into this place the church is speaking through the real-time, ongoing conversation that is Following: Embodied Discipleship in a Digital Age . Jason Byassee and Andria Irwin speak into the space between digital utopians and digital skeptics, modeling biblically grounded, theologically informed wrestling with how the church and Christians live out our mission and vocations amid the current technological revolution. Affirming that Christian faith is an inherently mediated one, Byassee and Irwin provide pathways for us all to draw on some of the best resources of our tradition to live faithfully in the present moment.

Deanna A. Thompson , Lutheran Center for Faith, Values, and Community, St. Olaf College

Following envisions a journey with others toward an uncertain destination. Byassee and Irwin write to cast theological light for our feet in this awkward but exciting expedition of faith in our digital culture. As fellow pilgrims on the way, they invite us into an urgent conversation that is sober yet hopeful and that may land us at an Emmaus table or an online platform with surprise vistas of Christ.

Andrew Byers , Ridley Hall, Cambridge; author of TheoMedia: The Media of God in the Digital Age

Half Title Page
Series Page

Theological Wisdom for Ministering Well Jason Byassee Series Editor Aging - photo 1

Theological Wisdom for Ministering Well
Jason Byassee, Series Editor

Aging: Growing Old in Church
by Will Willimon

Birth: The Mystery of Being Born
by James C. Howell

Disability: Living into the Diversity of Christs Body
by Brian Brock

Friendship: The Heart of Being Human
by Victor Lee Austin

Recovering: From Brokenness and Addiction to Blessedness and Community
by Aaron White

Title Page
Copyright Page

2021 by Jason Byassee and Andria Irwin

Published by Baker Academic

a division of Baker Publishing Group

PO Box 6287, Grand Rapids, MI 49516-6287

www.bakeracademic.com

Ebook edition created 2021

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any meansfor example, electronic, photocopy, recordingwithout the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is on file at the Library of Congress, Washington, DC.

ISBN 978-1-4934-3066-6

Scripture quotations are from the New Revised Standard Version of the Bible, copyright 1989 National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

Dedication

For Leighton Ford, who mastered high-tech evangelism
and then gave it up for face-to-face friendship

And for Fleming Rutledge, surprising
and surprised social media preacher
JB

For Allison, Marc, and Jennifer,
whose collective counsel helped free my voice
AI

Contents

Cover

Endorsements

Half Title Page

Series Page

Title Page

Copyright Page

Dedication

Series Preface

Acknowledgments

Introduction: The End Is Near

1. Putting on the New Self

2. A Pastoral Personality

3. The Opposite of Technology

4. Jesuss Own Family

5. Undistracted Friendship

6. The Internet Is (Kind of) a Place

7. Virtual Virtue

8. Daring to Speak for God

Conclusion: No Unmediated God

Notes

Index

Back Cover

Series Preface

One of the great privileges of being a pastor is that people seek out your presence in some of lifes most jarring transitions. They want to give thanks. Or cry out for help. They seek wisdom and think you may know where to find some. Above all, they long for God, even if they wouldnt know to put it that way. I remember phone calls that came in a rush of excitement, terror, and hope. We had our baby! It looks like she is going to die. I think Im going to retire. Hes turning sixteen! We got our diagnosis. Sometimes the caller didnt know why they were calling their pastor. They just knew it was a good thing to do. They were right. I will always treasure the privilege of being in the room for some of lifes most intense moments.

And, of course, we dont pastor only during intense times. No one can live at that decibel level all the time. We pastor in the ordinary, the mundane, the beautiful (or depressing!) day-by-day most of the time. Yet it is striking how often during those everyday moments our talk turns to the transitions of birth, death, illness, and the beginning and end of vocation. Pastors sometimes joke, or lament, that we are only ever called when people want to be hatched, matched, or dispatchedborn or baptized, married, or eulogized. But those are moments we share with all humanity, and they are good moments in which to do gospel work. As an American, it feels perfectly natural to ask a couple how they met. But a South African friend told me he feels this is exceedingly intrusive! What I am really asking is how someone met God as they met the person to whom they have made lifelong promises. I am asking about transition and encounterthe tender places where the God of cross and resurrection meets us. And I am thinking about how to bear witness amid the transitions that are our lives. Pastors are the ones who get phone calls at these moments and have the joy, burden, or just plain old workaday job of showing up with oil for anointing, with prayers, to be a sign of the Holy Spirits overshadowing goodness in all of our lives.

I am so proud of this series of books. The authors are remarkable, the scholarship first-rate, the prose readableeven elegantthe claims made ambitious and then well defended. I am especially pleased because so often in the church we play small ball. We argue with one another over intramural matters while the world around us struggles, burns, ignores, or otherwise proceeds on its way. The problem is that the gospel of Jesus Christ isnt just for the renewal of the church. Its for the renewal of the cosmoseverything God bothered to create in the first place. Gods gifts are not for Gods people. They are through Gods people, for everybody else. These authors write with wisdom, precision, insight, grace, and good humor. I so love the books that have resulted. May God use them to bring glory to Gods name, grace to Gods children, renewal to the church, and blessings to the world that God so loves and is dying to save.

Jason Byassee

Acknowledgments

I (Jason) am grateful first to Andria Irwin for being willing to write this book with me. As I sent her internet link after internet link I realized what I had becomethe weird elder relative who thinks everything on the web is interesting and passes it right along. Thanks for letting me be your weird uncle. I love that moment when I was on my phone in Epiphany Chapel during worship and you turned to me and said, You know youre terrible with that thing, right?

I had the benefit of being the youngest staff member at several media outlets early in the digital era and so being forced to figure out blogging. The Christian Century nudged me to start what was then called Theolog and what came to be the Christian Century network of blogs. It has some really good writers now. For a time, it just had me and whomever I could manipulate into writing for me for no pay. Wondering what we were doing online got me asking questions about what digital technology is for. I am grateful for those opportunities (and I owe some friends some money!). Thanks to my longtime colleague and friend there Amy Frykholm for her help editing this volume.

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