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Giving up Facebook… for Lent?

Kristi Gustafson, social media strategist/staff writer for the Albany Times Union, recently asked me about a growing trend: giving up Facebook, Twitter, and other social media for Lent.  I was glad to hear that Kristi was very familiar with the practice of Lenten fasting in the 21st century.  Check out her article and my comments:

Chocolate, swearing, eating out. These are things Christians have given up for Lent for decades.

Now there’s something new to sacrifice.

Facebook.

The average Facebook user spends 4 hours and 35 minutes a month posting updates on their relationships, checking friends’ vacation photos and playing games like Farmville on the social networking site, according to a January report from Experian Hitwise, a New York City-based global research firm.

That’s more time than most of us spend doing anything other than sleeping, exercising or being at work.

In an age in which Facebook sees more monthly traffic than Google, some Lenten observers are leaving their “friends” behind as part of their commitment to the 40-day fasting.

“Giving up the same things year after year gets boring and you have to freshen it up,” says the Rev. Alan Rudnick with the First Baptist Church in Ballston Spa. “With the popularity of social media, people will say, ‘I like Facebook or Twitter just as much as I like chocolate.’ “

Read the rest…
Comments

4 Comments

  • Reply 20/20 Vision: What Role for Social Media? « Discernable Futures March 26, 2011 at 6:18 pm

    […] Giving up Facebook… for Lent? (onthebema.com) […]

  • Reply Life sans Facebook – Reflections on my Lenten Journey « ctrecoveryjourney April 24, 2011 at 10:07 am

    […] Giving up Facebook… for Lent? (onthebema.com) […]

  • Reply Nibby Priest February 14, 2012 at 4:55 pm

    So Alan are you going to try to do it? Very tempting to me. I like my twitter but I could loose Facebook easy. Well not that easy. But it would be a good riddance.

    • Reply Alan February 14, 2012 at 5:23 pm

      Nibby, its tough. Social media is so tied to ministry and not for fun. I keep up with church members through Facebook

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