We’re facing an information overload.
With the quick tap of a finger we can access an endless stream of addictive informationโsports scores, breaking news, political opinions, streaming TV, the latest Instagram posts, and much more. Accessing information has never been easierโbut acquiring wisdom is increasingly difficult.
In an effort to help us consume a more balanced, healthy diet of information, Brett McCracken has created the โWisdom Pyramid.โ Inspired by the food pyramid model, the Wisdom Pyramid challenges us to increase our intake of enduring, trustworthy sources (like the Bible) while moderating our consumption of less reliable sources (like the Internet and social media). At a time when so much of our daily media diet is toxic and making us spiritually sick, The Wisdom Pyramid suggests that we become healthy and wise when we reorient our lives around Godโthe foundation of truth and the eternal source of wisdom.
Reviews
โThe foolishness of the world sometimes feels overwhelming. The Wisdom Pyramid lifts that fog away, revealing just how full Godโs world is with goodness, truth, and beauty. By turning to these sources, in proper order, the wise will find folly fading into the background, and the world will look likeโand beโa different place. Wisdom, as this book reminds us, is right there in front of us if only we will turn our eyes upon it.โ
โKaren Swallow Prior, Research Professor of English and Christianity and Culture, Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary; author, On Reading Well
โOne of the most important books Iโve read this year! What if you woke up to discover youโd been eating only Doritos and Oreos for a year? When it comes to our โinformation diet,โ The Wisdom Pyramid reveals most of us essentially have been consuming junk foodโwith an ensuing onslaught of personal and public health crises. McCracken is like a doctor who not only diagnoses the source of our cultural malady with precision but also prescribes the cure: a change in how we consume knowledge that can promote healthy wisdom and love of God.โ
โJoshua Ryan Butler, Pastor, Redemption Church, Tempe, Arizona; author, The Skeletons in Godโs Closet and The Pursuing God
โBrett McCrackenโs The Wisdom Pyramid models the discernment he asks readers to practice. Thoroughly biblical, it is also informed by a wide range of sources of truth, beauty, and goodness. From Augustine to Jacques Ellul, Reformed theology to pop music, historic Christian hymns to modern poetry, McCracken models how to wade through our daily deluge of input, form unhurried habits of attention, and grow into the patience and humility of godly wisdom. I imagine this book becoming essential reading for families, student groups, and churches.โ
โJen Pollock Michel, author, Surprised by Paradox and Teach Us to Want
โIt has been said that โwe make our tools, and then our tools make us.โ Engaging a wide cross section of insightful analyses, Brett McCracken offers profound wisdom about how we have more information, less truth, and a shrinking capacity for identifying truth. Well-informed, vividly illustrated, and aimed toward solid answers, The Wisdom Pyramid is a must-read.โ
โMichael Horton, J. Gresham Machen Professor of Systematic Theology and Apologetics, Westminster Seminary California
โThe first time I discovered Brett McCrackenโs wisdom pyramid diagram, I knew he was onto something. I used it the next Sunday. Lots of people talk about it. Why? Because Christians desperately need a balanced diet of information. This book is amazingly helpful at both diagnosing a problem in contemporary Christianity and offering a holistic solution. The Wisdom Pyramid is clarifying and convicting. Itโs a must-read guidebook for discipleship in our information-saturated age.โ
โMark Vroegop, Lead Pastor, College Park Church, Indianapolis, Indiana; author, Dark Clouds, Deep Mercy and Weep with Me
โIn an age of perpetual distraction, hurried commentary, and shallow conclusions, weโre quickly losing our aptitude and appetite for wisdom. Brett McCrackenโs book is a much needed antidote for the dangerous ethos of the day. A compelling call to reorder our lives and reorient our hearts and minds around the shape of biblical wisdomโloving, listening, and looking to GodโThe Wisdom Pyramid is essential reading for anyone who longs for a more meaningful journey of faith.โ
โJay Y. Kim, Lead Pastor of Teaching, WestGate Church, San Jose, California; author, Analog Church
โThe digital revolution has transformedโnot tweakedโthe fabric of daily life. Never has it been easier to gain attention, or discover entertainment, or obtain knowledge. No wonder weโre addicted. But Google is a pitiful substitute for wisdom. Indeed, if weโre not careful, life online will make us aware of everything and wise about nothing. Thatโs why Iโm so excited for Brett McCrackenโs antidote to the inverted priorities of our age. If you live on an island without WiFi, pick a different book. Otherwise, The Wisdom Pyramid is for you. Few things reinvigorate the soul, after all, like exchanging the stultifying air of a Twitter timeline for the fresh sea breeze of an excellent book. And this is an excellent book.โ
โMatt Smethurst, Managing Editor, The Gospel Coalition; author, Deacons and Before You Open Your Bible
โIt is genuinely disturbing to consider how we are being shaped by our current forms of information intake. Brett McCrackenโs The Wisdom Pyramid is a godsendโa pathway back to sanity and health. I believe that the proposal offered in The Wisdom Pyramid is as important for our mental and spiritual health in the modern world as a proper diet is to our physical health. On top of that, this book is beautifully written, winsome, actionable, and hopeful. Buy a copy for yourself and lots more to give away!โ
โGavin Ortlund, Senior Pastor, First Baptist Church of Ojai; author, Finding the Right Hills to Die On
โAs a mother, I want my four children to develop the habits they need for a life of wisdom. They are quickly growing up into adults who will have to navigate for themselves the constant clicks and pings of life in our global, digital, information age. And so, I want their childhoods and teenage yearsโand our family life as a wholeโto be intentionally formed by things that are both true and lovely. Although itโs not specifically a parenting book, The Wisdom Pyramid is a gift to parents, giving readers the essential tools to establish habits and priorities for a life of wisdom. This is a helpful book, and itโs also a hopeful book. Itโs helpful because Brett McCracken writes biblically and insightfully on every page. Itโs hopeful because it ultimately reveals the wise life to be the very good life.โ
โMegan Hill, author, Praying Together and A Place to Belong; Editor, The Gospel Coalition
โIn an age of post-truth and information overload where Christians are constantly persuaded by AI algorithms and anecdotal absolutes, Brett McCracken winsomely pushes us past verified checkmarks and Facebook fact-checkers to bring us to the God who sits over wisdom and truth.โ
โThomas J. Terry, Director, Humble Beast; member, Beautiful Eulogy; Lead Pastor, Trinity Church of Portland
About the Author
Brett McCracken is a senior editor for the Gospel Coalition and the author of Uncomfortable; Hipster Christianity; and Gray Matters. He lives with his family in Southern California, where he serves as an elder at Southlands Church.
More About Brett McCracken
Brett McCracken is a writer and journalist based in Southern California. He is the author of Hipster Christianity: When Church & Cool Collide (Baker, 2010), Gray Matters: Navigating the Space Between Legalism & Liberty (Baker, 2013), and Uncomfortable: The Awkward and Essential Challenge of Christian Community (Crossway, 2017). He has written for The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, Huffington Post, CNN.com, The Princeton Theological Review, The Gospel Coalition, Mediascape, Books & Culture, Christianity Today, Relevant, IMAGE Journal, Converge, Mere Orthodoxy, ERLC, Canon & Culture and Q Ideas. He speaks and lectures frequently at universities, churches & conferences. He blogs at brettmccracken.com.
A graduate of Wheaton College and UCLA (M.A. in Cinema & Media Studies), Brett currently works as senior editor at The Gospel Coalition and is pursuing a master’s in theology at Talbot School of Theology.
Brett and his wife Kira live in Santa Ana, California and are active in their local church, Southlands, where Brett serves as a pastor/elder. Brett loves movies, particularly those by Terrence Malick (or those with a Malickean sensibility). Other things Brett enjoys: Marilynne Robinson, the Inklings, Kansas Jayhawk basketball, the Kansas City Royals, reading and writing in coffeeshops, history, art museums, food, hiking, traveling, planning trip itineraries, writing TripAdvisor reviews and making things better by editing