 And Now a Word from Our  Sponsor
And Now a Word from Our  Sponsor 
 John  MacArthur
  The saturation in today’s world of television, movies, and  other forms of visual media has had an adverse effect on our ability to listen,  think, and reason.  It’s as if the entire society is suffering from attention  deficit disorder.  Sadly, many preachers decided to make major accommodations to  the appetites of a generation weaned on media and entertainment; but they left  biblical preaching behind.
The saturation in today’s world of television, movies, and  other forms of visual media has had an adverse effect on our ability to listen,  think, and reason.  It’s as if the entire society is suffering from attention  deficit disorder.  Sadly, many preachers decided to make major accommodations to  the appetites of a generation weaned on media and entertainment; but they left  biblical preaching behind. 
 Have you ever noticed how may television  commercials say nothing about the products they advertise?  The typical jeans  commercial shows a painful drama about the woes of adolescence but never  mentions jeans.  A perfume ad is a collage of sensuous images with no reference  to the product.  Beer commercials contain some of the funniest material on  television but say very little about beer.
Those commercials are  designed to create a mood, to entertain, to appeal to our emotions—not to give  us information.  They are often the most effective commercials because they make  the best use of television.  They are the natural product of a medium that  offers a surreal view of the world.
On television, reality mingles  imperceptibly with illusion.  Truth is irrelevant; what really matters is  whether we’re entertained.  Substance is nothing; style is everything.  In the  words of Marshall McLuhan, the medium has become the message.
Amusing Ourselves to Death is the name of a perceptive but  disquieting book by Neil Postman, a professor at New York University.  The book  argues powerfully that television has crippled our ability to think and reduced  our aptitude for real communication.
Postman says television has  not made us the best informed and most literate generation in history.   Instead it has flooded our minds with irrelevant and meaningless information.   Television has conditioned us only to be entertained and has therefore rendered  other critical forms of human interaction obsolete.
Even the news,  Postman points out, is a performance.  Suave anchormen coolly present brief  segments about war, murder, crime, and natural disaster.  Those are punctuated  by commercials that trivialize the news stories and isolate them from any  context.  Postman recounts a news broadcast in which a Marine Corps general  declared that global nuclear war is inevitable.  The next segment was a  commercial for Burger King.
We are not expected to respond  rationally.  In Postman’s words, “The viewers will not be caught contaminating  their responses with a sense of reality, any more than an audience at a play  would go scurrying to call home because a character on stage has said that a  murderer is loose in the neighborhood.”[1]
Television cannot demand a  sensible response.  People tune in to be entertained, not to be challenged to  think.  If a program requires contemplation or demands too much use of the  intellectual faculties, it will die from lack of an audience.
Television has shortened our attention span.  Would anyone in our society,  for example, stand for seven hours in a sweltering crowd listening to the  Lincoln-Douglas debates?  It’s frankly hard for us to imagine that our  great-great-grandparents had that kind of stamina.  We have allowed television  to convince us we know more while actually lowering our tolerance for thinking  and learning.
By far the book’s most trenchant message is in a chapter  on modern religion.  Postman, no evangelical, nevertheless writes with piercing  insight about the decline of preaching.  He contrasts the ministries of Jonathan  Edwards, George Whitefield, and Charles Finney with the preaching of today.   Those men relied on depth of content, profundity, logic, and knowledge of  Scripture.  Preaching today is superficial by comparison, with the emphasis on  style and emotion.  “Good” preaching by the modern definition must above all be  brief and amusing.  It is entertainment—not exhortation, reproof, rebuke, or  instruction (cf. 2 Tim. 3:16; 4:2).
The epitome of modern preaching is  the slick evangelist who overstates every emotion, struts around the platform  with a microphone wired to his ear, and gets the audience clapping, stomping,  and shouting while he incites them into an emotional frenzy.  There’s no meat to  the message, but who cares as long as the response is enthusiastic?
Of  course, preaching in most conservative evangelical churches is not that  exaggerated.  But sadly, even some of the best of today’s preaching is more  entertainment than teaching.  Most churches typically feature a half-hour sermon  with lots of amusing anecdotes but little doctrine.
In fact, many  preachers think of doctrine as undesirable and impractical.  A major Christian  magazine once published an article by a well-known charismatic speaker.  He  mused for a full page about the futility of both preaching and listening to  sermons that go beyond mere entertainment.  His conclusion?  People don’t  remember what you say anyway, so most preaching is a waste of time.  “I’m going  to try to do better next year,” he wrote; “that means wasting less time  listening to long sermons and spending much more time preparing short ones.   People, I’ve discovered, will forgive even poor theology as long as they get out  before noon.”[2]
That perfectly sums up the attitude that dominates  most modern preaching.  There is an obvious parallel between that kind of  preaching and those trendy jeans-perfume-beer commercials.  Like the  commercials, it aims to set a mood, to evoke an emotional response, to  entertain—but not necessarily to communicate anything of substance.
Such preaching is sheer accommodation to a society bred by television.  It  follows what is fashionable but reveals little concern for what is true.  It is  not the kind of preaching Scripture mandates.  We are to “preach the word” (2  Tim. 4:2), “speak the things which are fitting for sound doctrine” (Titus 2:1),  and “teach and preach…the doctrine conforming to godliness” (1 Tim. 6:2-3).  It  is impossible to do those things and always be entertaining.
If the  tragic course of modern preaching is to be changed, Christians must insist on  biblical preaching and be supportive of pastors who are committed to it.  How  does a pastor of integrity reach people who may be unwilling or even unable to  listen to carefully reasoned expositions of God’s truth?  That may be the  greatest challenge for today’s Christian leaders.  We cannot yield to the  pressure to be superficial.  We must find ways to make the truth of God known to  a generation that not only doesn’t want to hear, but may not even know how to  listen. 
  
 [1] Neil Postman, Amusing Ourselves to Death (New York: Penguin, 1984),  104.
[2] James Buckingham, “Wasted Time,” Charisma (Dec. 1988):  98.  
 
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http://www.gty.org/Resources/articles/10178COPYRIGHT  ©2008 Grace to You
THOSE TWO PREACHERS - TAKEN AUGUST 17, 2008
Charles Whisnant, Bob Temple, Sr.
Rivers of Joy Baptist Church
I mean this was Sunday Evening Service
Suit and Bible and Ties ! !