It is too much information too absorb and it teaches us to be rather passive about the things we learn. In days gone by people learned what they need to know and used that information for their jobs or families or purchases or the like. Now we simply accumulate information as if it was what made us wise. Plus, we live in a time when it is almost impossible to know if what you see or read or hear is actually true or a fabrication or a complete invention of non-human so-called intelligence. We guess at what we see, hear, and read and hope that what we like is true and what we don't like or what feeds our fears is false. I wish there was an easy way to figure it all out.
Information is just information. It is too easy to mistake knowing something as important and good in and of itself and forget why knowing that information is important. We treat life as as a time to accumulate information and it has become the digital equivalent of all the stuff our grandparents collected in their lives and we donated to a thrift store. It has become a wildly successful industry. Think of how little Facebook contributes to our world and how valuable it is as a company and how rich you or I might be if we had invested in it early on. This is not simply true for the world. Spiritual information has become something of a cottage industry and it has not escaped notice of the marketers who are leaving the churches in the dust as they speed ahead to become the source of spiritual information for the masses.
Wisdom and experience were once the province of the old. In our youth culture, it is not exactly a highly valued commodity -- age and experience, I mean. Where the Biblical landscape had an honored place for the gray haired, now they are largely seen as liabilities or problems the younger folks wish would either shut up or go away. Was I too harsh? There are always brilliant young minds in every discipline but they are largely less knowledgeable and smart about life. That is the premise of how many TV comedies? It is not hard to know what you do not know but it is not so easy to know what you don't. I do not claim to be gifted in much and my expertise is usually less than my ambition. If we only spoke about what we really knew, the rooms of our lives would be rather silent. The passive information we suck up as if it were something real and valuable often leads us to the false conclusion that we know whereof we speak. That is realm of age and experience and it is what contributes to the wisdom in so much short supply today.
It is probably good advice to tell ourselves and others not to speak as if we knew everything but it is advice seldom taken. As evidence of that, I point to the increasing intolerance of diverging views on the unsocial social media and the violence that too often becomes the first response rather than the last. We would do well to learn a little patience. I am particularly speaking about those who insist that it is their job to inform the stupid masses of all the things they have gotten wrong without at all considering that they might be included among them.
Stick to what you know is good advice. Stick to what God says is better. Oddly enough, the plethora of information that surrounds us has led us to listen less to the voice of God and more to the gut feelings we have in the moment. That is a particular danger we have fallen into in this world today. We know something about everything but just enough Scripture to make us dangerous. Lutherans were once prone to advise people to read the catechism. It sounds like a put down. It is probably one of those voices of wisdom we no longer pay much attention to anymore. There is a great temptation to believe that you can know everything but in so doing you end up knowing not much and even less about the very important things of this life. I fear that this has contributed to our quest to redefine gender, marriage, family, etc, and it has left us with a definite void in our education. When the most basic things to our lives are largely strangers to us, it is typically the moment when we replace them with unsuitable substitutes.






