The Christian and Modern Technology
Course Description
Modern technology is clearly something for which we should be profoundly grateful. We are the beneficiaries of a series of technological revolutions that began in the 18th century and have continued with increasing frequency into the present, e.g., revolutions in production, in transportation, in communications, in the organization of firms and governments, and in medicine.Yet modern technology also appears to be changing, and indeed has already substantially altered the quality of our culture. Late educator and social critic Neil Postman went so far as to contend that technology has actually displaced the heart of modern Western culture. Our fascination with modern technology, Postman argued, has invited us to substitute quantitative calculation for qualitative judgment, to replace genuinely human ends with technical means and, ultimately, to evacuate our world of all but technical meanings.
Modern technology, in short, is a social fact to be reckoned with, particularly if we would understand the shape, the values, and the direction of contemporary society and culture. This course is intended to provide students with the opportunity to begin to reflect Christianly on modern technology.
Fall 2025
This course is onsite only.
Offered | 2025 Fall |
Dates | Sep 8 - Dec 19 |
Days | Mon |
Format | Onsite Only |
Credit Hours | 3 |
Room Number | Rm 010 |
Teaching Faculty

Craig Gay
Professor of Interdisciplinary Studies
Craig Gay lectures in the area of Christianity, Society, and Culture, and directs Regent’s ThM degree program. He is the author of With Liberty or Justice for Whom? (Eerdmans, 1991); The Way of the (Modern) World (Eerdmans, 1998); Cash Values: The Value of Money the Nature of Worth (Eerdmans, 2004); Dialogue, Catalogue and Monologue (Regent College Publishing, 2008); and Modern Technology and the Human Future: A Christian Appraisal (IVP Academic, 2018). He was also the co-editor (with C. Peter Molloy) of The Way of Truth in the Present Age (Regent College, 1999). He has contributed chapters to a number of collections on the subjects of modernity, secularization, economic ethics, and technology, and his articles and reviews have appeared in Christian Scholar’s Review, American Journal of Sociology, Crux, and Markets & Morality. Craig Gay is an active member of St. John’s (Vancouver) Anglican Church. He and his wife Julie have four grown children.