“God bless YouTube,” Lula said. “You don’t even need to go to college no more because you could learn how to do everything on YouTube.”
“Kids on the Youtube, learning how to be cool.”
“It's a good thing I've got to live with you two or I'd be putting this on YouTube later. And mocking you”
“Kyle tapped Caeden’s shoulder. “Isn’t your little brother the one who sang the Fergie song at the top of his lungs during that assembly last year.”Caeden buried his face in his hands. “That’s the one.”Shane snickered. “I watched that on youtube.”“He did a dance too,” Tyler said, and began to, I guess, mimic it. The other guys joined in and they began to sing the lyrics to Glamorous.“Oh God,” Caeden croaked. “Youtube?”They finished mimicking and Shane said, “Yeah, it’s on youtube. It’s got like a million hits or something.”“A million?” Caeden squeaked.”
“I want to touch you in real time not find you on YouTube, I want to walk next to you in the mountains not friend you on Facebook.”
“I have got, over the years, a sense of the immense sweep of creation, of the evolutionary process in everything, of how incomprehensible God must necessarily be to be the God of heaven and earth. You can’t fit the Almighty into your intellectual categories…. What kept me a skeptic [of secularism] in college was precisely my Christian faith. It always said: wait, don’t bite on this, get a wider picture, continue to read. If you want your faith, you have to work for it…. Even in the life of a Christian, faith rises and falls like the tides of an invisible sea. It’s there, even when he can’t see it or feel it, if he wants it to be there. You realize, I think, that it is more valuable, more mysterious, altogether more immense than anything you can learn or decide in college. Learn what you can, but cultivate Christian skepticism.”