Recent events have tuned the eyes and ears of Americans toward news sources in ways we have not seen for quite some time. And, as ceaseless reports of disease outbreak, brutal violence, tragedy and genocide plaster our plasma screens, believers must be mindful of how we receive our news and what we choose to do with it.

How Do You Get Your News?

As a journalism student, I was told repeatedly that there is no such thing as objective reporting—an accurate assessment. Every person approaches events from a perspective, an existing worldview or set of assumptions that shape how they perceive and share those events. A reporter’s approach is no different.

Because this is true, Christians must practice discernment when filtering through news updates. Am I reading that something happened (an event) or what someone thinks about something that happened (a commentary)? Most of the news we receive today is a mixture of both, if not heavier on the commentary side. This kind of reporting often buries whatever truth it contains in conjecture and opinion.

Just as very human reporters craft news stories, very human editors make value judgments about which stories to feature. The decision of what goes on the front page and what leads the evening newscast is a worldview decision. Understand this when you consume news reporting and ask yourself:

“Why is this story the lead?”

“Is this report concerned with facts?”

“Is there good research that solidly supports this report?”

“Am I being shown what is happening or being told what to think about it?”

A journalist’s job is to ask questions, but that’s also our job as thinking Christians when we read, hear or watch a report. Ask questions of the report, the reporter, yourself, your neighbor and your worldview. And then make a decision about what to do. Directed reporting has always been designed to lead you to make a decision.

What Do You Do With Your News?

Christians hear news reports through the filter of an objective standard of truth. Having answered the biggest question of all, “Whose world is it anyway?”, we’re able to apply the lesser questions that sift fact from commentary with an eye toward discerning truth. Under such scrutiny, much reporting won’t bear under the weight of questions from a responsive reader.

While the bottom line for Christians is truth, the bottom line for networks and newspapers may not be. Journalism is a business, meaning the dollar is often a media corporation’s bottom line. This reality heavily influences reporting. Chasing scandals and political gaffes buffers the bottom line, just not often the one concerned with truth. So, what should we do to ensure we’re well-informed?

Keep digging. Steer clear of entertainment news traps and go to the sources most likely to bring you the bottom line of truth. Begin to identify them by humbly engaging in conversation over your coffee cup or cubicle walls. Consult news sources across the liberal-conservative spectrum to better understand how stories are being shaped. Before reflexively sharing with others something that looks and sounds like a news story, check its source. If the source or the article itself is sensational, treat it with healthy suspicion.

We must also get with other believers to pool intelligent Christian thinking around the issue. Ask questions among yourselves: “What have you heard?”, “What do you know?”, “Where have you found good information on this?”, “How does this align with what the Bible says?”

Even more, we must pray as events scroll across the screen. Develop this discipline. Let your news intake get you out of yourself and move you to pray, and then to act as you are able. Let the news be an instigator to get you involved in all that God is doing in this world that belongs—without hype, sensationalism or slant—to Him. 

© 2014 The Village Church, Flower Mound, Texas. All rights reserved. Used by permission.Originally published at https://www.thevillagechurch.net/the-village-blog/give-us-this-day-our-daily-news/.