What Goes Into the Beer?
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February 11, 2013
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And shareholders in—let us say—brewing companies, would astonish the directorate by arising at shareholder’s meetings and demanding to know, not merely where the profits go or what dividends are to be paid, not even merely whether the workers’ wages are sufficient and the conditions of labor satisfactory, but loudly, and with a proper sense of personal responsibility: “What goes into the beer?”Loudly, she says! Nowadays the secular publishers are buying out the Christian ones. What is the creed one has to confess to be published? I believe it goes something like: “I’m already quite a celebrity, and there are a plethora of people eager to buy my books because I make them feel good.” I’m not being completely fair. There are some fantastic people in the Christian publishing industry, and there are certainly great books being written. But the business as a whole has really gotten greasy. It seems the bigger the publisher, the lower the standards of orthodoxy. Kind of like beer. Yet there appears to be a rise in the sophisticated beer drinker. Sure, there are plenty of Budweiser and Miller Lite guzzlers to keep the big boys of the brewing industry running. But now the microbrewer is getting more attention. Discerning tongues want flavor and quality in their brew. They want to have the satisfaction of knowing their Amber Ale came from a passionate bike ride through Europe, searching for just the right inspiration. They want to taste some hints of what’s actually in the beer. The Christian bookstore may be showcasing books with the greatest cash value. But if you want flavor, it’s in good doctrine and good writing! I know I’m not the only one who is lamenting the absence of these. Here is an excerpt from one of Tim Challies’ articles:
Speaking personally, I have long since stopped shopping at the nearby Christian bookstore. They almost never have the books I want and even if they did, I would pay quite a bit for them and spend a lot of time driving there and back. And then there’s the fact that so much of what they carry is junk—not just trinkets and toys, but material that is opposed to sound doctrine. The last time I went to a Christian bookstore there was a section for Roman Catholics and a section for people who need their fix of Joyce Meyer and Benny Hinn. And I thought, “This is no more Christian than Amazon.” In fact, I think it is actually worse; under the banner of “Christian” things are being sold that claim to be Christian but are deceptively anti-Christian. That may have been the moment I realized that I felt no obligation to support that business.Have you been in a liquor store lately (my Baptist friends need not answer
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