Pokémon
GO is the most popular mobile game in American history. The app
instructs players to use their mobile devices to catch Pokémon
characters in the real world. It has sent multitudes of people into
streets, parks, and malls looking for such creatures. More than
twenty-one million people play the game every day in the US. (For more,
see Ryan Denison's
Is Pokémon Go-ing to Church?)
I'm old enough to remember when Blockbuster stores rented video games
and VHS tapes. Now Blockbuster stores and VHS tapes are no more. We
could never have imagined then the technology we take for granted today.
One reason for the popularity of Pokémon GO is that it provides a
distraction from a world that grows more frightening by the day.
Security is tighter than ever for the Republican Convention in
Cleveland. (For Nick Pitts's reports from the convention, please go to
our Facebook page.) According to this morning's
New York Times,
ISIS has claimed responsibility for the seventeen-year-old Afghan who
attacked passengers on a German train before he was killed by police.
After the shootings in Baton Rouge and Dallas, police officers across
the country are patrolling in pairs.
A psychologist
noted in
The New York Times,
"With the frequency of shootings and terror attacks there is a sense of
anxiety that's building in people, a sense of vulnerability and
powerlessness."
In the face of such crises, it's hard to take the long view. What
happens today seems more important than what happened yesterday or will
happen tomorrow. The current challenge seems to be more of a challenge
than anything we've faced before or will face again. But that's seldom
true.
From 1960 to 1993, violent crime in America
increased by 560 percent. It has since
dropped
to half that level. We are understandably worried about Islamic
terrorism. But I grew up in a time when we lived every day with the very
real possibility of nuclear war.
Bernie Sanders focused his campaign largely on the problem of economic
inequity in America, a challenge for which much progress remains.
However, according to the
Pew Research Center,
poverty in the US has fallen from twenty-six percent in 1967 to sixteen
percent in 2012. The poverty rate for African-Americans has fallen by
fifty percent.
We often hear that America has become more secular than ever before. However, a recent survey
reports
that thirty-two percent of atheists, agnostics, and people who have no
religion believe in life after death. There is indeed a "God-shaped
emptiness" in every soul.
Here's my point: Every generation has its challenges, and every
generation can choose to face them with or without God. Our Lord wants
to use the crises of these days to show us the folly of
self-sufficiency. He wants to draw us from our problems to his
providence, from our fears to his omnipotence. His word is clear:
"Unless the LORD builds the house, those who build it labor in vain.
Unless the LORD watches over the city, the watchman stays awake in vain"
(Psalm 127:1).
Is God building your house today?
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