Facts, Fiction, and the Media: Reading and Watching the News as a Lutheran

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As Christians, we live as strangers even in our own land. We live in a tension between being a Christian and an American. Our aims and the country’s aims will sometimes diverge. But God also calls us to work for the good of our neighbors, as far as we are able. In America, where citizens participate in the task of bringing about just government, Christians have a vocation to participate in the political life of the nation.

Participation in political life requires us to remain informed about current affairs. This task immediately confronts us with a problem. The extreme political and media fragmentation of our time undermines any shared national narratives. Instead, a cacophony of competing political narratives barrages us from all sides, and a partisan agenda seems to lurk furtively behind the simplest statements of fact.

This mess makes the vocation to participate in political life more complicated, but it does not excuse us from the task of fulfilling it. A defensive crouch is common, but insufficient. We cannot fulfill our vocation to our neighbor by proclaiming, “I don’t pay much attention to the news; it’s all biased anyway.”

Here are a few things to keep in mind as you strive to keep yourself informed. Click here!

This article was first printed by and is reprinted here with permission of The Lutheran Witness.

Be Informed
Hear more about a California law forbidding schools from informing parents of their child’s gender transition with Neeraja Deshpande of the Independence Women’s Forum.

Be Equipped
“Scientists are suing an academic publishing company for retracting three key studies exposing the dangers of the nation’s most popular abortion drug regimen shortly before the U.S. Supreme Court was slated to hear arguments in a landmark mifepristone case.” Click here to learn more.

Be Encouraged
“If we find ourselves with a desire that nothing in this world can satisfy, the most probable explanation is that we were made for another world.” –C.S. Lewis

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