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pensmama87
Guest
I don’t deny that most of us could probably benefit from more time spent in prayer. That said, this attitude strikes me as a tad sanctimonious.Satan can be subtle as well as obnoxious. We aren’t always aware of how the things of the world are influencing us.
Prayer is key to the efficacy of the Sacraments. When we allow the Lord of sanctify us, then we can SEE!
If half the time spent in entertaining ourselves is spent in prayer…oh what a difference it would make in the world.
Most media produced for mass consumption is terrible regardless of form. It just is, and I don’t dispute that. But I find the dismissal of *all *of it curious. What if we applied this to the written word? (Historically, novels were regarded with a high level of suspicion.) Should we throw out Shakespeare because he didn’t write miracle plays? Is he really on the same level as the latest trashy bodice ripper?
And yes, I think this applies to visual media too. There’s really amazing art out there, and I don’t think I’m somehow an unholy, unfocused on God person because I see some of it and enjoy it. Relaxation and entertainment are not sins. Even nuns watch movies.
I also just found out about a service called VidAngel that sounds interesting - it’s a streaming and filtering service so you can edit out whatever objectionable content you like in film and TV. I’m not sure if we’ll use it because they don’t have an app for our streaming platform at home, but if they do I think we might.
If you just don’t like TV or movies, or books, or art museums, or whatever, then that’s fine. But it’s a little rich, I think, to take that dislike and assume those who enjoy it must enjoy it too much and inappropriately and that it distracts them from a rich and fulfilling prayer life. I find God in art all of the time, and I have the added boost of having something I can talk about with non-Christians, maybe even to evangelize.