by 
  
  	Travis
  Allen
	Copyright 2008
	Internet Ministry Manager 
	Grace to You. 
	
 
Modern religion is thriving in the world today. 
				Every day men bow at the altar of innovation, making sacrifices 
				to a god called Progress. Progress rewards its worshipers with 
				tangible rewards from the technological treasure chest—HDTV, 
				iPods, plasma screens, dual core processors. The production of 
				more sophisticated technology, and the money it generates, 
				justifies the pursuit and the sacrifice.
				
				But Progress is a false god and a true antichrist. Its modern 
				religion has boldly given mankind an unwarranted promotion while 
				it has subtly marginalized the true God. And it has enslaved its 
				adherents with intangible chains, keeping them busy, distracted, 
				and entertained as they strive to lay hold of a pipe dream.
				
				A Recent History: Moore’s Law
				
				In 1965, Dr. Gordon E. Moore, co-founder of Intel Corporation, 
				wrote an article that anticipated the age of the personal 
				computer and established a model for the development of 
				technology. The article forecast the effective cost of computer 
				processing power would be cut in half every two years—more 
				complexity at a cheaper price.
				
				Lower costs would enable manufacturers to increase the 
				complexity of an integrated circuit, and Dr. Moore predicted a 
				doubling of processing power and performance every two years. 
				That was a revolutionary idea at the time, an idea Caltech 
				professor Carver Mead called “Moore’s Law.”
				
				Moore’s Law wasn’t merely an informed prognostication. Dr. Moore 
				had mapped out a formula for the technology industry that 
				demanded efficiency and speed in research, development, and 
				production. Technology companies that failed to adhere to the 
				two-year timeframe risked getting left behind.
				
				Dr. Moore and his colleagues were among the first to wed 
				technology and business, first with Fairchild Corporation and 
				then with Intel Corporation. Soon, “every new idea that came 
				along created at least one new company,” something Dr. Moore 
				calls the “Silicon-Valley effect.” Moore’s Law drove competitors 
				forward in a race to be the first company to release the newest 
				technology, resulting in rapid development of computing 
				technology.
				
				Intel Corporation developed the first commercial microprocessor 
				in 1971, Intel’s 4004 chip, which kicked off the revolution in 
				personal computers. That was only the beginning. Moore’s Law 
				went beyond integrated circuits to advance the development of 
				hard disk storage, RAM storage capacity, fiber optic data 
				transmission, and digital imagery.
				
				Central processing units (CPUs) enter the market every year, and 
				they are faster and smaller. Researchers recently set a 
				processor speed record of 500 GHz and simulations push the 
				possible speeds up to 1 THz—that’s terahertz. In comparison, the 
				fastest dual-core processors available in today’s personal 
				computers have a combined speed of 5-6 GHz. As for size, Intel 
				manufactured its latest processor, the Wolfdale, on a 45 
				nanometer (nm) chip (the diameter of an atom of silicon is 
				around .2 nm). Just ten years ago, chips were produced at 500 
				nm. Enter the age of nanotechnology.
				
				The rate of development has been staggering; technology today is 
				faster, smaller, more powerful, and more efficient than ever, 
				and there are no signs of the trend slowing. Advancements in 
				technology continue to double every two years or less. Even 
				though Dr. Moore himself doubts Moore’s Law can go on forever, 
				scientists are keeping the faith. Some hope carbon nanotubes and 
				quantum computing will replace silicon and transistor 
				technology. Salvation by innovation; Moore’s Law lives on.
				
				The Effect of Moore’s Law
				
				Moore’s Law and the rapid evolution of computer processing, 
				especially the advent of the personal computer, have changed the 
				face of public and private life. The decreased cost to develop 
				more complex, more powerful computer processors has delivered 
				the benefits into every sphere of life—business, engineering, 
				science, medicine, the military, and beyond. Moore’s Law has 
				given scientists, engineers, and programmers a reason to put 
				faith in the future—they’ve witnessed results and breakthroughs 
				that were once unimaginable. Impenetrable barriers continue to 
				disappear as scientists come closer to them.
				
				The economic element of Moore’s Law, especially the success of 
				Silicon Valley ventures, made Moore’s Law an attractive standard 
				for other industries, even for society as a whole. Expectations 
				created by technology now fuel the insatiable consumer demand 
				for Progress, in every industry, and innovation has become the 
				key to every successful enterprise.
				
				But is technology a Trojan horse? How does Progress benefit “the 
				faith which was once for all delivered to the saints” (Jude 3)? 
				What does innovation have to do with unchangeable truth and an 
				unchanging God? How does the modern, secular hope of future 
				advancement affect core doctrines of the Christian faith?
				
				The demands of technology, progress, and innovation have 
				affected modern perceptions, which in turn animate the 
				antichrist spirit of the modern world. That’s a strange thing to 
				say, especially since the benefits of technology are so 
				apparent. But the subversion of God and His truth has been 
				subtle because it’s cloaked in the robes of Progress. More now 
				than ever, the Christian gospel battles against an entrenched 
				mindset of secularism in the popular culture. Man stands at the 
				center while God looks in from the periphery.
				
				Subversion of Wisdom
				
				Honoring the Aged
				The Bible teaches, “You shall rise up before the grayheaded, and 
				honor the aged, and you shall revere your God” (Leviticus 
				19:32). “A gray head is a crown of glory” (Proverbs 16:31). Why? 
				Because the older generation is a repository of truth and 
				wisdom. Peter instructs young men to submit to their elders (1 
				Peter 5:5). Paul commands older women to teach the younger women 
				(Titus 2:3-5). Leaders in the church are to be older men, called 
				“elders,” who stand apart for their time-tested maturity and 
				wisdom (1 Timothy 3:1-7; Titus 1:5-9). From cover to cover, the 
				Bible promotes the honor of the aged because of their wisdom.
				
				But technology favors the young. Technology advances so rapidly 
				that even experts struggle to keep up with the pace. New 
				products hit the market almost annually with new user 
				interfaces, new software, new updates, and young people with 
				energy embrace the challenge to learn new things. To them, the 
				novelty is almost euphoric.
				
				Not so with older people. With age comes resistance to change 
				(and that’s not always a bad thing). You can almost hear a 
				teenager’s thoughts: “Why should I honor the older 
				generation—they can’t even program a cell phone!” The perception 
				of youthful superiority enters popular culture via many 
				different avenues, but technology reinforces it in tangible 
				ways. A Bible that elevates the wisdom of the old appears to 
				support institutional power structures and suppress the bright 
				new thoughts of the young.
				
				Maintaining Role Distinctions
				The Bible clearly assigns different roles to men and women (1 
				Corinthians 11:3; Ephesians 5:22-33; Titus 2:3-5). By God’s 
				design, men are to be sacrificial leaders, faithful providers, 
				and courageous protectors in society; women are to be submissive 
				helpmeets, devoted homemakers, and nurturing mothers. That role 
				distinction between the sexes was almost unquestioned in human 
				history until technology started leveling the playing field in 
				the mid-twentieth century.
				
				For centuries, physical strength and battlefield prowess made 
				the difference in provision and protection. Today, anyone can 
				program a computer, fly an airplane, and push a button to drop a 
				bomb. Because of technology, Peter’s concept of women as the 
				weaker vessel (1 Peter 3:7) is a hard sell. As Jonathan Rauch 
				says in his article, “The Coming American Matriarchy,” “If there 
				is a ‘weaker sex,’ it isn’t female.” A Bible that assigns the 
				leadership role to the man and the submissive role to the woman 
				appears outmoded (at best) and chauvinistic (at worst) in the 
				equalizing light of technology.
				
				Preferring the Original and the Steady
				Technology also creates the perception that faster is better 
				than slower, newer is better than older. Quick repentance is 
				prudent (Proverbs 28:13-14; Isaiah 55:6-7; 2 Corinthians 6:2), 
				and a new heart and a new spirit are better than the old 
				(Ezekiel 11:19; 18:31; 36:26), but, generally speaking, speed 
				and novelty are not wise. How do passages like Psalm 27:14 
				(“Wait for the LORD”) make sense to an impatient generation 
				weaned on instant results? What taste does a society that 
				hungers and thirsts for the new have for an old gospel that has 
				never changed? A Bible that lists patience as a product of 
				spiritual growth (Galatians 5:22) and advocates the original to 
				the exclusion of the new-and-improved (Genesis 3:1-7; Galatians 
				1:8-9; 1 John 1:1-4) runs contrary to the spirit of the age.
				
				All those things (and there are others) create the perception, 
				albeit an unwarranted one, that the Bible has nothing to say to 
				the modern generation. The values that accompany technology, 
				progress, and innovation are turning biblical wisdom on its 
				head; and, according to that thinking, the replacement doesn’t 
				look like folly at all.
				
				Subversion of God
				
				The most damning aspect of this modern, secularized religion is 
				the subversion of God. As men continue to innovate for the sake 
				of Progress, they produce new technologies that create the 
				perception that man is pretty smart and God is pretty dumb. To 
				many, the Bible is outmoded, outdated, and out of touch with 
				reality. The new clerics are the scientists, the engineers, and 
				the programmers.
				
				Every new scientific and technological breakthrough reinforces 
				the popular sense that salvation comes through human innovation. 
				Human genius and hard work will overcome every obstacle. 
				Conversely, God is marginalized, diminished, and ignored in the 
				modern world.
				
				Dr. Moira Gunn, host of NPR’s Tech Nation and BioTech Nation, 
				conducted a fascinating question and answer session with Dr. 
				Gordon Moore at the 2007 Intel Developers Forum. At the end of 
				the session, she gave him a refrigerator magnet that cited one 
				of her basic tenets: “If God didn’t make it, it’s Technology.” 
				You can’t miss the intentionality of the capitalization in that 
				sentence.
				
				Dr. Gunn’s dictum is nothing new or novel—it’s as old as Romans 
				1:
				
				For even though they knew God, they did not honor Him as God, or 
				give thanks; but they became futile in their speculations, and 
				their foolish heart was darkened. Professing to be wise, they 
				became fools, and exchanged the glory of the incorruptible God 
				for an image in the form of corruptible man. (Romans 1:21-23)
				
				Belief in a god isn’t wholly incompatible with this new form of 
				religion, but it’s a god without weight, power, or glory. The 
				true God is kept at arms length, and technology keeps extending 
				the arm. It offers distractions, entertainments, new gizmos and 
				whiz-bangs, and all of it keeps the eyes of humanity diverted 
				from the heavens and focused on the earth. Modern religion herds 
				humanity into an ever-tightening circle, closer to the self and 
				farther from the God of salvation.
				
				The apostle Paul foretold the effects of this modern religion 
				long ago:
				
				But realize this, that in the last days difficult times will 
				come. For men will be lovers of self, lovers of money, boastful, 
				arrogant, revilers, disobedient to parents, ungrateful, unholy, 
				unloving, irreconcilable, malicious gossips, without 
				self-control, brutal, haters of good, treacherous, reckless, 
				conceited, lovers of pleasure rather than lovers of God; holding 
				to a form of godliness, although they have denied its power. (2 
				Timothy 3:1-5)
				
				On one level, technology is morally neutral. Phones, computers, 
				databases, silicon semiconductors, plasma televisions, and iPods 
				are just wires, electricity, and bits of silicon encased in 
				plastic—completely harmless. On another level, a more subtle 
				level, pieces of technology carry beliefs like parasites; they 
				create perceptions like clever magicians. Those beliefs, 
				perceptions, and assumptions are not neutral—they breathe 
				“according to the prince of the power of the air, the spirit 
				that is now working in the sons of disobedience” (Ephesians 
				2:2).
				
				Walking Carefully
				
				As Christians, we walk a razor’s edge—we are in the world but 
				not of the world (John 17:11, 14). We use technology to work and 
				develop and produce, but we must be wary of technology. Progress 
				is not our god, innovation is not our salvation. We worship the 
				Lord Jesus Christ and follow His Word, even though that puts us 
				on a collision course with modernity.
				
				But today’s idolatry charms many Christians. Many find 
				themselves subtly distracted and gently allured by the benefits, 
				entertainments, and conveniences technology brings. Christians 
				in the modern world must wake up and listen to an old warning:
				
				Do not love the world, nor the things in the world. If anyone 
				loves the world, the love of the Father is not in him. For all 
				that is in the world, the lust of the flesh and the lust of the 
				eyes and the boastful pride of life, is not from the Father, but 
				is from the world. And the world is passing away, and also its 
				lusts; but the one who does the will of God abides forever. (1 
				John 2:15-17)
				
				Living in the world and using its technology is dangerous 
				business. The forces that accompany technology are becoming more 
				powerful, ubiquitous, influential, and consuming. But there is a 
				God who stands above it all, watching it fade away, who will one 
				day call every individual to account. “There is no wisdom and no 
				understanding and no counsel against the Lord” (Proverbs 21:30).
				
				When we realize it’s all passing away, we’ll anchor ourselves in 
				the bedrock truth of the immutable God. We’ll subvert the world 
				and its wisdom with the true wisdom of God’s Word. We’ll 
				proclaim the gospel of eternal salvation in Christ to a world 
				that seeks temporal salvation in Progress. And we’ll worship the 
				unfading glory of the immortal God and scoff at the fleeting 
				twinkle of the latest technological toy.
				
				Soli Deo Gloria!
				
				© 2008 by Travis Allen
				Internet Ministry Manager
				Grace to You
				
				[1] Gordon E. Moore, “Cramming more components onto integrated 
				circuits,” Electronics Magazine 38:2 (April 19, 1965), http://download.intel.com/research/silicon/moorespaper.pdf.
				
				
				[2] Moore, “The Accidental Entrepreneur,” Nobelprize.org 
				(December 3, 2001), http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/physics/articles/moore/index.html.
				
				[3] Manek Dubash, “Moore’s Law is dead, says Gordon Moore,” 
				Techworld (April 13, 2005), http://www.techworld.com/opsys/news/index.cfm?newsid=3477. 
				Dr. Moore once asked renowned physicist Stephen Hawking what 
				barriers existed that would limit the growth of the integrated 
				circuit. According to Hawking, there are two—the speed of light 
				and the atomic nature of matter. Researches are already looking 
				for a way around those barriers.
				
				[4] Michael Kanellos, “Gordon Moore on 40 years of his processor 
				law,” CNET News.com (April 7, 2005), http://www.news.com/Gordon-Moore-on-40-years-of-his-processor-law/2008-1006_3-5657677.html.
				
				[5] Jonathan Rauch, “The Coming American Matriarchy: The fairer 
				sex gets ready to take over,” National Journal (January 15, 
				2008), reasononline, http://www.reason.com/news/show/124402.html.
				
 
Added to Bible Bulletin Board's "MacArthur's Collection" by:
Tony Capoccia
Bible Bulletin Board 
Box 119
Columbus, New Jersey, USA, 08022
Our websites: www.biblebb.com and
www.gospelgems.com 
Email: tony@biblebb.com
Online since 1986