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[X735.Ebook] Ebook Digital Disciple, by Adam Thomas

Ebook Digital Disciple, by Adam Thomas

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Digital Disciple, by Adam Thomas

Digital Disciple, by Adam Thomas



Digital Disciple, by Adam Thomas

Ebook Digital Disciple, by Adam Thomas

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Digital Disciple, by Adam Thomas

This time in our society is unlike any other. People communicate daily without ever having to speak face to face, news breaks around the world in a matter of seconds, and favorite TV shows can be viewed at our convenience. We are, simultaneously, a people

  • Sales Rank: #1202242 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2011-05-01
  • Released on: 2011-05-01
  • Format: Kindle eBook

About the Author
Adam Thomas was ordained to the Episcopal priesthood in 2008 at the age of 25, making him one of the first priests from the millennial generation. His unique voice in the faith community emanates from a combination of his youth, honesty, humor, and tech-savvy nature. Adam is a nerd and a gamer and a preacher and a follower of Christ. He serves God as the pastor of St. Mark's Episcopal Church in Mystic, CT, writes the blog Where the Wind, and lives a hectic but beautiful life with his wife Leah and their one-year-old twins. His Abingdon Press�resources include Unusual Gospel for Unusual People Series, Coverage: Who is Jesus, Letters from Ruby, and Digital Disciple.

Most helpful customer reviews

11 of 12 people found the following review helpful.
A Good Primer for Reflection on Technology and Christian Faith
By Benjamin A. Simpson
I have been thinking and writing about church and media now for a handful of years. The topic, and the reality, is fascinating. The Internet is a present reality and an overwhelming force in our world, and for those of us who depend and rely on its powers to enhance our productivity and increase our social reach, the challenges it presents for maintaining a grip on our essential humanity while being digitized and virtualized are immense. Christians should be thinking about technology, its effects, and the opportunities we now have as followers of Jesus in light of this new and evolving facet of so many of our lives.

Adam Thomas' Digital Disciple is just such a work. Thomas, an Episcopal priest, is a member of the Millennial generation and a product of the digital age. In the telling of his life narrative, Thomas sounds a number of notes concerning embodiment and disembodiment, physicality and virtuality, and connection and isolation that are pressing and relevant concerns for all of us.

Within each chapter of his book, Thomas turns his attention toward a specific technological challenge for Christian discipleship. He examines virtual and physical connection (and the value in both), the difference between loose ties and deep communion, the buffers technology surrounds us with and the need for intimacy, the embodied nature of human existence, and the hurried world we live in that can be a barrier to prayer. For each of these concerns, Thomas turns his attention to Scripture, helping his reader to see where ancient words provide a contemporary challenge to modern maladies. He seeks to answer the challenges and opportunities present within the use of technology with theological truth, providing a God-centered account of both sin and redemption in our use of modern tools.

Overall, my impression of this work is very positive. It is a short book, and an easy read. It is filled with personal illustrations that concretize technological concerns, rather than relegate them to abstraction. Thomas has a self-depreciating style, and commonly exposes his nerdiness in the footnotes. He is authentic, transparent, and honest concerning his own struggles. He teaches from his own life.

To learn more about Thomas, visit his blog or follow him on Twitter. It is very clear that he is quite passionate about all things technology, is analytical concerning its use, and is deeply passionate about Christian discipleship.

DISCLAIMER: In accordance with FTC guidelines, I'd like to alert the reader that I received a copy of this book in exchange for a review. However, I am committed to speaking truthfully concerning any book that I review, as I am obligated to my readership to provide a biblically and theologically informed perspective that can help my readers either take up or avoid resources that may prove useful for ongoing Christian reflection and maturity.

25 of 32 people found the following review helpful.
Turning it off? Is that the best we can do?
By Let's Book
Description (source): We connect with people everyday around the world through websites, blogs, and a myriad of social networks. But do we really connect while we're isolated in the Internet bubble? In Digital Disciple, millennial, blogger, and Episcopal priest Adam Thomas explores this contradiction between connection and isolation through the perspective of one who's always known a world with the Internet. (publisher's info)

Review source: ARC provided by publisher through Netgalley (note: misplaced footnotes made the book very difficult to read in the kindle ARC I was given. It's to be hoped that this was cleaned up before publication.

Major ideas: Adam Thomas writes from the perspective of a digital native wondering what effect the internet (and related technologies) will have on his relationship with God. Mostly, Thomas sees a pretty bleak picture of separation, disembodiment, lack of mindfulness, and even addiction as he reflects on Tech (as he terms it) and the changes it has made in society. The solutions he offers, then, are for the most part suggestions about how to live without the internet.

Writing style: As I was reading, I was trying to figure out the audience for this book. Thomas includes definitions of really basic tech terms throughout (i.e. "google," "facebook"); these make you think that the book might be geared for someone who knows nothing at all about the internet. But really, who is left in our society who doesn't know what Google and Facebook are? There are a lot of books being written right now that deal with these ideas from a secular viewpoint (Lessig, Shirky, etc.); Thomas did not seem to have engaged with these authors much if at all. His few references were to the standard Christian authors like C.S. Lewis.

Take-aways: Because of my confusion about his audience (or perhaps because I was not his audience), I sometimes found myself frustrated that Thomas did not really grapple with some of the issues that he raises. In other words, I found the questions raised in the book to be pertinent and thought-provoking; the suggested solutions much less so. My take-aways from the book will be the questions: What might it mean to "do church" online? How will the internet change society, the church, and the individual believer? Does the disembodied self of the avatar deny the incarnation?

Wrap-up: I would recommend this book for the layperson who wonders about the difference between Millennial and non-Millennial believers, or about the ramifications of technology upon faith. I would not recommend the book for anyone doing scholarly work. 3/5*

6 of 7 people found the following review helpful.
If "Family Guy" did theology. . .
By Rev A Patrick K Funston
I read Fr. Thomas' book because a mentor of mine gave it to me after using it in a small group study at his parish. He was interested in what a member of Fr. Thomas' own generation thought of his ideas, mostly because he said that the most common reaction from his congregation was, "I don't understand what's bad about Facebook! My kids and grandkids don't call me, so I use Facebook to see what they are doing!"

Fr. Thomas examines the life of the Christian in the digital age. This short book is easy to read if you are part of his target demographic, but I can imagine it would be difficult if you aren't. A Kansas City to Cleveland plane ride did it for me.

The writing style is very reminiscent of an episode of the TV show "Family Guy." Fr. Thomas makes frequent parenthetical asides, most often to interject humor. Even as a fellow member of the Millennial generation, the generation who's ability to "multi-task" defines the term ADD, it took me several paragraphs to get used to his voice. Fr. Thomas also has a huge vocabulary, flowing easily from pop-culture references to 50-cent words that would make an English teacher proud.

As a self-described blogger, Fr. Thomas' content in incredibly self-referential. The number of times he uses the first-person pronoun verges on the unnecessary. This is clearly not a book for scholarly interest, it is best used for self-reflection and small group study. For small group study, Fr. Thomas does provide questions for discussion. Such small group study would best be contained to groups of 20-somethings or younger, Fr. Thomas' contemporaries, to whom the book seems to be directed.

A completely un-mathematical assessment of Digital Disciple's content finds about 50% self-reference, mostly examining the author's life around video games and Facebook, 20% F. Scott Fitzgerald-esque scene painting for the purpose of proving a point, and about 30% theology.

Fr. Thomas' theology is the bright point of this book. Most of it is well thought out and generally agreeable. However, it regularly sits at the surface. Routinely, Fr. Thomas ends a section with only a couple paragraphs of theological analysis and the book suffers for it, I wanted to hear more of what he has to say! Bright points include analyses of Paul's ecclesiology and Fr. Thomas' understanding of the Incarnation in light of the digital age.

I recommend this book to Millennials who are realizing that their digital selves are lacking Christ and who want to follow one man's journey toward a happy medium.

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