We live in a world full of shiny distractions, faced with an onslaught of viral media constantly competing for our attention and demanding our affections. These ever-present visual âspectaclesâ can quickly erode our hearts, making it more difficult than ever to walk through life actively treasuring that which is most important and yet invisible: Jesus Christ. In a journalistic style, Tony Reinke shows us just how distracting these spectacles in our lives have become and calls us to ask critical questions about what weâre focusing on. The book offers us practical steps to redirect our gaze away from the addictive eye candy of the world and onto the Ultimate Spectacleâleading to the joy and rest our souls crave.
âThirty years after Neil Postmanâs Amusing Ourselves to Death, Tony Reinkeâs Competing Spectacles takes the impact-analysis of modern media to new levels: a new height and new depth. New height, because Christ crucified, risen, and reigning is brought into the discussion as the Spectacle above all spectacles. New depth, because the focus is not on what is happening to politics, but what is happening to the human soul. The conception of this book is not cavalier; it is rooted in the profound biblical strategy of sanctification by seeing (2 Cor. 3:18). The spectacle of Christâs glory is âthe central power plant of Christian sanctification.â Ugly spectacles make us ugly. Beautiful spectacles make us beautiful. Reinke is a good guide in how to deflect the damaging effects of digital images âin anticipation of a greater Sight.ââ
-- John Piper, Founder and Teacher, desiringGod.org; Chancellor, Bethlehem College & Seminary; author, Desiring God
âTony Reinke has proven to be a wise guide for Christians through this era of technological whirl. Now with this accessible, sagacious book, he has done so again. This book shows us how to pull our eyes away from the latest viral video or our digital avatars of self and toward the âspectacleâ before which we often cringe and wince: the crucifixion of our Lord. Thatâs the spectacle we need.â
--- Russell D. Moore, President, The Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission of the Southern Baptist Convention
âTony Reinke has the prophetic knack of helping us see the truth about ourselves and our world. In these pagesâas illuminating as they are disturbing and challengingâhe stands in the tradition of the spiritual masters who have understood that the city of manâsâand womanâsâsoul is often attacked and destroyed through eye-gate. But Competing Spectacles not only diagnoses our distorted vision; it prescribes spectacles that give us twenty-twenty spiritual vision. Essential reading.â
--- Sinclair B. Ferguson, Chancellorâs Professor of Systematic Theology, Reformed Theological Seminary; Teaching Fellow, Ligonier Ministries
âHow to navigate the Christian life in a media-saturated culture feels more confusing than ever. Tony Reinke provides a dose of desperately needed clarity. Combining careful research with relevant application, this book is for anyone who wants to be more discerning and critically engaged in our cultureâwhich should be every Christian!â
--- Jaquelle Crowe, author, This Changes Everything: How the Gospel Transforms the Teen Years
Table of Contents:
Part 1: The Age of the Spectacle
1: Life inside the Digital Environment
2: Spectacles Defined
3: Distracted Spectacle Seekers
4: Image Is Everything
5: The Spectacle of the Self in Social MediaÂ
6: The Spectacle of the Self in GamingÂ
7: Spectacles of Tele-Vision
8: Spectacles of Merchandise
9: Politics as Spectacle
10: Terror as Spectacle
11: Ancient Spectacles
12: Every Nine Seconds
13: The Spectacle of the Body
14: The Church in the Attention Market
Part 2: The Spectacle
15: Spectakils in Tension
16: Prynneâs Footnote
17: The Worldâs Greatest Spectacle
18: Is the Cross a Spectacle?
19: Two Competing Theaters
20: Spectators of Glory
21: The Church as SpectacleÂ
22: The Church as Spectacle Maker?
23: A Day inside the Spectacle
24: Our Unique Spectacle Tensions
25: One Resolve, One Request
26: The Spectator before His Carving
27: A Movie So Good It Will Ruin YouâWould You Watch It?