884 - Info Central
Friends ... News you can trust is infinitely more satisfying than news you can’t. See the column below.
First, a couple of love notes. My younger son
John and his wife Jeni in Fort Lauderdale are due to have their first child, a SON,
Oct. 30 – next Monday. Elder son Eric
and wife Lindsey in Utah, also expecting but not until February, had the gender
reveal party Sunday and it’s a GIRL to go with big brother Banner (4) and big sister
Haven (2). My cup runneth over.
For
you mathematicians, 884 weekly columns divided by 52 weeks a year makes this week’s
column the completion of 17 consecutive years writing Common Christianity. Shooting for 17 more!
Now,
here’s the column. God bless.
Bob
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Spirituality Column #884
October 21,
2023
Common
Christianity / Uncommon Commentary
Info
Central
By
Bob Walters
“Surely
you desire truth in the inner parts; you teach me wisdom in the inmost place.”
– Psalm 51:6, David’s beautiful lament to God after Nathan pointed out David’s
sin
Why
is it I can find the most disturbing parts of the Bible somehow calming, and almost
any aspect of modern news media and commentary wrenchingly disturbing?
I’ve
settled on this answer: it’s because I trust the Bible as God’s unwavering and
righteous truth, and understand the media as merely man’s catalog of loaded
opinions and politically-philosophically-socially “correct” – and so-often bogus
– narratives.
High-alert
discernment is wearying; truth waggling is insulting; the news is tiring.
I
like to think it was not always that way … about the media, I mean. I grew up in journalism. My dad worked for the Associated Press in
Detroit and then was a city editor for a newspaper in Michigan. I wrote sports
for my local newspaper starting in my senior year in high school, earned a journalism
degree in college, and spent roughly 12 years writing and editing daily sports
news. Dad always hoped I’d become a “real
journalist” and cover the city hall and crime beats. I was having fun in sports, thank you.
But
in Dad’s era – the 50s and early 60s – journalism held fast to straight news
and objectivity. Sure, different newspapers had different and well-known
“slants,” but headlines provided information, not teases. Truth was pursued; facts were honorable.
Stories
were “inverted pyramids” of prioritized facts in descending order, the better
to cut copy from the bottom when space ran tight. The readers’ time was considered valuable: “tell
‘em what they need to know” … quickly. The
readers’ reasoning powers were trusted; specious and purpose-pitch insinuations
were ridiculed.
Today
in online “print” news with infinite space, we have click-bait heds and
shaggy-dog ledes to draw us inward to intrusive advertising surrounding and
embedded in imprecise paragraphs. Broadcast
news, commentary, and even “entertainment” largely toes an annoyingly
Progressive “don’t think, just believe us” line of arrogance and deadly
falsehoods. Trust wanes. Most media offer pot holes and land mines.
George
Orwell … we never should have doubted you.
Prevarication reigns.
Conversely,
much of my life – I am 69 years old – I did not know or trust God, Christ, the
Holy Spirit, or the Bible. That has changed. Truth and righteousness reside with
them, and I know searching the scriptural path will lead me to peace. Reading the Old Testament, the first time
through, for me, was devastatingly upsetting in some parts and overwhelmingly
boring in others (all those “begats,” tribal lists, and laws). Yet, it is the
story of God and the story of humanity: a catalog of what does not work for
humans. Jesus is the culmination of that story; faith
in Him is true and the end will be glorious.
Jesus
has been left behind in our large media picture, just like I left Him out of my
life’s worldview and philosophy for many years.
Truth was elusive and hope was a situational and materialistic variable,
not the spiritual surety Jesus has brought to me.
I sparingly,
warily, look at a dozen or so news websites daily, receive the print editions
of both the Wall Street Journal and the Epoch Times, and stopped watching TV
news and commentary after the 2022 election. It has been the most satisfying
and healthiest ceasefire since I quit smoking 30 years ago (January 1, 1994).
My
ever-dwindling time now is focused on my trusted family, friends, colleagues, students,
and a Lord I love and trust. Peace in
this life is indeed elusive, and I know exactly where to go for Good News,
truthfully, anytime I need it. Wisdom
comes at last.
Walters
(rlwcom@aol.com)
can handle bad news but hates being lied to.
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