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A Decade of "Words of the Year"

Break Point / John Stonestreet
The Truth Network Radio
December 8, 2025 12:01 am

A Decade of "Words of the Year"

Break Point / John Stonestreet

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December 8, 2025 12:01 am

The past decade's words of the year reveal a cultural narrative of reality collapse, where feelings outweigh facts and truth becomes subjective. This collapse is fueled by curated unreality, algorithms, and the attention economy, leading to a fragmentation of society and a loss of authentic relationships. Christianity offers a liberating counter-narrative, where identity is not something to be manufactured but rather bestowed by God, freeing individuals from the tyranny of being defined by their curated presences and reactions to outrage.

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Welcome to Breakpoint, a daily look at an ever-changing culture through the lens of unchanging truth for the Colson Center on Johnstone Street. Each year since 2004, Oxford University Press has chosen a word of the year based on usage compiled from news sources across the English-speaking world. Today, speaker and author Abdu Murray describes how words reflect and explain culture. Here's Abdu. Oxford's annual word of the year is more than a linguistic curiosity.

It's a cultural MRI, a snapshot of what society fears, desires, and obsesses over. Looking at the winners from 2016 through 2025 reveals a decade-long narrative of what has been called reality collapse, a decreasing ability to perceive the world directly, unmediated by algorithms, outrage engines, and the gravitational pull of our own preferences. The trend started with the 2016 word of the year, post-truth. capturing the moment when feelings began to outweigh facts. Post-truth was not about sloppy thinking, but a declaration of near-divine autonomy.

If truth is whatever I feel most intensely, reality becomes something I generate, not something I discover. This was the initial push down the cultural descent into curated unreality. A year later came YouthQuake, the idea that a surge of young people could shake the social and political order. It captured the energy of those convinced they could reshape society through activism. But the youth who embodied the post truth Youth Quake are now nearly ten years older.

The generation that helped define post-truth and YouthQuake has bequeathed a landscape where reality collapse has accelerated. The words of the year that followed, utilized by the successors to the millennials, were eerily accurate reflections of the ecosystems millennials built. In 2022, Goblin Mode was the word of the year. It captured a cultural embrace of laziness, a retreat from discipline and ambition, a far cry from YouthQuake. In 2023, Riz emerged, reflecting performative charisma, identity as performance, crafted for an algorithmic audience.

In 2024, Brain Rot admitted what many had long suspected. endless scrolling, dopamine baiting feeds, and digital passivity were hollowing out young minds. The promise of Youth Quake's energy had given way to devices shaping cognition, fragmenting attention, and eroding mental resilience. Then came twenty twenty five, and the language of reality collapse became even more precise. The winner, RageBait, describes content that provokes anger to keep people in line with their group's ideologies and online to perpetuate them.

Exaggeration or outright falsehoods bait us to believe the world is perpetually at war, conditioning us to view disagreement as insanity and nuance as betrayal. This year's runner-up, Aura Farming, reflects a subtler but equally pervasive phenomenon. Young people are striving to cultivate a curated self-image online, an aura that requires effort to maintain, polish, and present. Farming is the right word. The image must be sown, tended, and harvested.

It is pressure to constantly self-create where authenticity is measured in likes, shares, and comments. Ragebait hijacks perception externally, while aura farming enslaves the self internally. One distorts the world, the other distorts identity. In both cases, young people are made to live in a perpetual state of construction and reaction, as if their worth and reality depend entirely on their ability to perform, provoke, and curate. Christianity offers a liberating counter narrative, which may account for why we're seeing surges in Bible sales and downloads.

The Bible insists that our identity is not something we must endlessly manufacture. Rather, it is bestowed. Humans are created in God's image, which carries inherent dignity, creativity, and capacity for authentic relationship. The God-given image frees us from the tyranny of being defined by our curated presences, our reactions to outrage, or the attention economy. We are defined by the One Who made us.

We are free to discover once again. Truth in this framework is not a subjective feeling or a self-fashioned projection. Truth is a person. Jesus is the ultimate anchor for reality, unchanging, compassionate, and authoritative. He validates our feelings by bringing them into alignment with what actually is.

He calls us to see the world as it is, not as the algorithms present it. He invites us to resist the cognitive and emotional conditioning of brain rot, aura farming, and rage bait. The last decade of Words of the Year teaches us that when we try to feel our way into truth, our reality collapses. When we allow algorithms, outrage, or curated self-performance to define reality, we fragment into rage, passivity, and distortion. But when we anchor ourselves in the reality of God's image, We reclaim the capacity for thoughtful engagement, creativity, and authentic relationships.

Both with him and with others who share that image. Anchored in that reality, we are free to see clearly, think independently, and act with integrity. We are not mere brains to be conditioned. We are image bearers called to resist the collapse grounded in the one truth. Who studies us?

That was Abdu Murray. Today's commentary was adapted from his forthcoming book, Fake ID: How AI and Identity Ideology Are Collapsing Reality and What to Do About It. For the Colson Center, I'm John Stone Street. If you're a fan of Breakpoint, please leave us a review wherever you download your podcast. And for a version of today's commentary that you can download and share with others, go to breakpoint.org.

Hello, my name is Scott Miller and I have the privilege of serving as Vice President of Finance at the Colson Center. As we approach the end of the year, I want to thank you for standing with us in this mission. Because of your generosity, countless believers are being equipped with a strong biblical worldview and that work continues into 2026. Did you know there are ways to give beyond cash or check? Many partners choose to give through stock, securities, or a donor-advised fund.

Which can also provide tax benefits. Every gift, no matter the form, helps us share truth and hope in a culture that desperately needs it. If you'd like to make this kind of gift, please ensure it reaches us by December 31st. Just email us at advancement at ColsonCenter.org. That's advancement at ColsonCenter.org.

Thank you for making this kingdom work possible. From all of us at the Colson Center, have a blessed and Merry Christmas.

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