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Technology: An Evil Master
- 04/12/06
- 24
Why is it that when a person is looking for a house, driving slowly down a darkened street straining to see the numbers on the fronts of the homes or on the mailboxes at the end of the driveways, he automatically turns down the car radio? He does so because he instinctively knows that music or voices are a distraction. A person cannot focus as well on the task at-hand when there is noise in the background. Noise is a distraction.
I find that when I am writing, and especially writing something that requires deep thought and consistent logic, I need to remove background distractions, whether that means I turn down the music playing from my computer or close the door to my office to drown out the sounds of squabbling or playing children. I do this without thinking about it. As I strain to collect my thoughts and to put words to them, I automatically turn down the music. I am often surprised, when I have finished my writing, to find that the music has been turned off or the door has been closed. I may have no recollection of doing so. It is a natural reaction.
Many years ago I heard a sermon, one of the few I remember from my younger days, where the pastor suggested that we try turning off the stereos in our cars, especially when we are driving alone, and spend the time thinking or praying. He had apparently developed the practice of praying aloud when driving alone. It earned him some bemused looks from other drivers who saw him talking, apparently to himself, but because he found it a beneficial practice he swallowed his pride and continued to talk to God. I often make a decision--and it has to be a deliberate decision for I am accustomed to pressing the "play" button immediately after starting the car--to turn off the radio or CD player when I drive and find this time to be extremely valuable. My mind can process things and mull things over far better where there is silence. This is particularly true if the song I might be listening to is one that is familiar to me as then, whether I am aware of it or not, I tend to sing along. It is hard to think deeply when singing!
In our culture we have allowed ourselves to become notoriously busy. And all the time, while we are busily going through life, there is a great deal of "noise" in the background of our lives. It may be music that plays when we drive, when we work and when we play. It may be a television that is always turned on whenever we have a few minutes of downtime. Perhaps when we find fifteen spare minutes between picking the kids up from school and beginning to cook dinner we watch an episode of Judge Judy or catch a re-run of The Simpsons. The background noise may be a Blackberry that constantly beeps and buzzes as it receives emails or stock quotes, even when we are far away from the office. It may be a cell phone that keeps customers or employees in contact with us even on weekends and holidays.
It seems to me that, as society continues to move in its current direction, and as we become ever more "wired," Christians will have to be deliberate about moderating and perhaps removing some of this ever-present background noise. If we are to be thinking people, people who think deeply and deliberately about spiritual matters, we simply cannot allow our lives to be overshadowed by the noise of technology.
I wonder how much we miss because of our busyness. I am often challenged to think just how much of life I miss while I check my email for the seventh time in a given evening or while I follow along online with a football game that I really don't care about. Technology, it seems, is a great distractor. Technology sticks its foot in the door of so many areas of my life. When I sit down to read to my children we may be interrupted by a phone call. As we head outdoors to play, I may do a quick check of my email and spend fifteen minutes typing out a reply that could easily wait until the next day; and then, while I play with the children, I am distracted, mulling over what I might have or should have said. Maybe we duck out of church before the time of fellowship is complete so we will have time to get home, make a sandwich and fluff the cushions on the couch before kickoff time.
Truthfully, I cannot think of anything that distracts us so fully and completely and consistently as technology. For too many of us, technology is a master and not a servant. It is our owner, not our possession. We let it run and rule our lives. We allow technology to determine the course of our lives, taking us where it leads. We determine our schedules with TV Guide in one hand, a Blackberry calendar in the other. We invest countless hours in online friendships, many of which are shallow and insignificant, while ignoring people in our local churches and communities. Perhaps while ignoring even our own families.
Technology is a great servant but an evil master. Technology is proof of the greatness of God and something we ought to be thankful for. But why, then, have so many of us allowed it to rule and govern our lives? Why do we allow it to play such an important, transcendent role in our lives and in our families?
It may be as simple as escapism. Technology, and especially its many applications to entertainment, provide unparalleled opportunities to escape from reality, even if only for a few minutes. Through technology we can leave the drudgery of our lives to listen to music that glorifies freedom or to watch television or film where what happens is far more thrilling than what we experience at home and in the office. The purpose of much of modern technology is to allow us to take our entertainment with us no matter where we go. MP3 players allow us to take thousands or tens of thousands of songs with us in the car or on the train. Video iPods allow us to escape from work or school for a few minutes by watching (ironically enough) The Office or unlimited amounts of pornography. Portable DVD players allow us to keep the children quiet in the car while we take a vacation. No matter who or where we are, we can use technology as a brief escape.
Perhaps we use technology to hide. Maybe we hate to be alone with our thoughts. We have become so accustomed to constant noise that, like a baby who can only sleep in a room with a white noise machine softly humming, we can barely stand the sound of silence. Maybe we have lost the ability to think or even the desire to think, and so we anesthetize our intellects, we lull them into inactivity, by replacing them with noise.
Maybe we need constant noise from the cell phone or Blackberry or laptop so we feel like we are accomplishing anything. Perhaps we have bought into the lie that we need to be accomplishing something significant--something that either pays the bills or leaves us with another bill to pay--at all times. And so we take phone calls during dinner and answer emails in church. We check email compulsively and work while we should be resting.
Or it could be that we prefer the anonymity and safety of online relationships, relationships that allow us to be almost exhibitionist in what we reveal about ourselves, all the while hiding behind a mask of secrecy. We would rather tell our deepest secrets to strangers on the other side of the continent, strangers we know only by their online personas, than find and nurture deep and lasting friendships close to home.
We are busy. We are distracted. Too often we hide behind the noise. As Christians we need to ensure that we are mastering the noise, not allowing it to master us. We need to be in control of our cell phones, Blackberries, laptops and inboxes. We can and often should use this technology, but we must now allow it to control us.

I am a follower of Jesus Christ, a husband to Aileen and a father to three young children. I write books and blogs for fun while doing web design and consulting for a living. I worship and serve at 
Comments (24)
Tim, thank you for this post.A timely challenge for all us busy technophiles!
Great post. I am experiencing such growth in my spiritual walk ever since my TV broke. I haven't had a chance to repair it and now I am wondering if I really need to fix it. Maybe I can take a few months of fasting TV and instead find some quiet time for other things.
This morning I took my bike to work and enjoyed the bike path through the woods. The only noise was a few random birds talking to each other. I had a nice time with God and hope to do it more often.
Technology is nice but it doesn't impress me much. I like the outdoors and nature. I think reality is the great missing story that we are all looking for.
Great post, Tim! And, for me, timely! I was just thinking this morning about some visitors we had in our home last evening. (By the way, they invited themselves over via a phone call the night previous and it didn't bother me a bit!) We didn't watch one second of television or listen to one second of music. We sat at the table drinking coffee and talking about our lives, what God has done and is doing in our lives, how to better witness and be a light in our community, looking at and discussing Scripture and our security in Christ....before we knew it, several hours had passed. I am thankful for friendships like this and the like-mindedness that comes in knowing God and serving Christ with others. May each of us take time away from our "things" to develop both our personal walk with Christ and our relationships with other believers.
Great post. We need to remember that God has commanded us to "be still and know that I am God."
Good thoughts here. I wish my TV would bust also.
I am not sure where I heard this, but apparently 40 or 50 years ago one of the major questions that college students were asked to ponder was "What are people going to do with all their free time now that technology is becoming so helpful?"
Anyone here have loads of free time? It seems like the easier technology made certain tasks the faster people have demanded them, and now because things can get done now, that is when everyone wants everything. Hence, all the work.
If we spent our free time doing the things that God advises us to do, perhaps we might give up all the gadgets and make room for more free time. It would take a big sacrifice, but all great things do.
I was just thinking...I've read a couple of times now that in one of her infamous sex tapes, Paris Hilton actually takes a cell phone call while having sex with someone. That may be the ultimate in allowing technology to intrude into life, or of being a slave to technology.
Erik Lokkesmoe wrote an apropos new Srewtape Letter titled, A Kingdom of Noise: A Screwtape Letter for the Media Age that I'm sure you'd enjoy.
I too find my life going at a hectic pace especially with all that technology affords. I listen to sermons constantly in my car though there are times I will choose not to listen but to pray and meditate on Scripture. I have also found that in the evening when I catch up on emails and online reading, I have to make concious effort to turn the computer off and open a book to read before bed.
Very insightful comments. For those who are interested in pondering this matter more, I would recommend David Shenk's "Data Smog" (HarperCollins, 1998).
This reminded me of a wonderful quote from Emerson:
"Things are in the saddle, and ride mankind. "
Obviously this is not a new problem but never have people been so "connected" and controlled by machines like we are today. The great parable of our time is the movie "Matrix." We think the machines are here for us only to discover that we exist to propogate machines (and their manufacturers).
John Locke's The De-Voicing of Society covers in great depth how tech is destroying human relationships.
I watch no TV anymore. Do not own an iPod and probably never will. Have no radio in my truck. Yet tech still consumes massive amounts of my attention.
My wife wants a cell phone for emergency purposes. I lived most of my life without one and don't need it. But all it takes is one story about a woman who was saved from some crazed lunatic by using her cell phone and the entire female portion of the species suddenly needs one.
When our cell phone company raised rates, I decided to drop them in favor of a prepaid system. But I spent at least twenty hours researching my options. A waste of time and money.
This last week I was researching Web hosts. That took countless hours to find one that fit my needs. I need another phone line for my business, but trying to juggle all the packages offered to me by the phone company has been crazy. Plus, they are never certain if all I need will work with my existing lines. No one ever knows for sure. That just requires more time researching and talking, waiting endlessly for the phone folks to get their acts together.
So even though I'm not really on the cutting edge of tech, the tech I do have grinds up my time in maintenance and updates. I spent all day yesterday trying to get my new accounts squared away on the new Web host and my domain register company. No problems at all, just time consuming, not to mention trying to transfer a site and build three new ones from scratch. Kiss the days goodbye.
Many times I think it would be better to be Old Order Amish. Not kidding on that, either. Read the book Better Off: Flipping the Switch on Technology.
It's mighty comforting to know I am not as eccentric as I thought I was. I had to special order my new truck, now 10.5 years old--I did not want to pay for a radio I would never use. In the early part of the last decade my TV habit had been reduced to the evening news, and then the nonstop coverage of OJ and Bill Clinton's sins took care of even that. And the only music I listen to outside of church is the Wood Thrush vespers at dusk--they're in superior voice this season. I'm still a serious user of news, but on my terms on the internet. And I've never been happier or my literary output more productive. Silence is golden! Thanks, Tim and kindred sacred-silence-junkies.
I wish my TV would bust also.
Several years ago, The wife of a friend commented that they were watching too much TV. He said, "You're right," picked up the TV, and threw it out the window of their 2nd-story apartment. They were happily without a TV until his inlaws noticed they didn't have one and gave them one for Christmas.
I could never find time to read or write so I broke my TV antenna. I thought that after a year of going without television I had developed a little self control so I bought another. I was wrong. I immediately became a mindless vegetable every evening once again. Oops! My antenna broke again last week.
this also reminded me of another quote:
"quick, somebody turn something on... I'm starting to think."
-Homer Simpson
convicting
Many years ago I got rid of the tv and only have a dvd player for old movies now and then. It is amazing that just by being in society how I know about Desperate Housewives, American Idol and something called 24, etc. even though I have never seen them. People talk about shows everywhere I go including church. How sad is this?
However, I must confess, I am online quite a bit...but then....I get to learn from people like Tim which is much more edifying than TV!
Hey now, don't be lumpin' 24 in with those other nasties.......Don't you know that being a 24 fan is a prerequisite for being Truly Reformed???
How did mankind ever get along before 21st century technology?
Better?
Don't you know that being a 24 fan is a prerequisite for being Truly Reformed???
At last, a true brother in the faith! :-)
Tim, you articulated so well some thoughts that have run through my mind many times. Calvin famously stated that our minds are "idol factories." In many ways, technology like Baal demands our sacrifice.
With malice to none, I don't know that disposing of all our technology is the answer but rather growing in the self-discipline to be able to turn theses things off.
Tim,
The trackback URL you have for this post isn't working for me, but I did want to let you know I featured this post over at Cerulean Sanctum:
Tim on the Terrors of Tech
Careful, Tim... you've got 1000 some-odd people on a thing called "feed-burner"... posting stuff like this might run you out of business if it convicts everyone like it convicted me :)
I hate my cellphone. I truly do. It rings when I'm not around, it rings and I have to speak to some salesperson. Noise is always in my life!
I find myself these days burnt out and stressed out from so much buzzzz in my life ... once upon a time, I used to drive to work in total silence. I hated the radio, so I barely listen to it. Now with my mp3 player, gone are the days of silence.
I kinda miss it. :)
I think I'll not listen to the mp3 player on the way home today.
Thanks for the post, Tim :)
Tim,I am a college student at Mansfield University, Pennsylvania. In one year, I will hopefully be a teacher in a classroom. Last week I was told the following saying, "technology will not replace teachers, but teachers will replace teachers who do not use techonology." If this phrase is true, then it scares me. By the way - I have went three 3 years of college without owning a computer, and I am always getting yelled at for not using my phone. I feel like crying every day now, becuase I want a simpler life. I feel so cheated that I had to be born in this time, and not two hundred years ago - It depresses me when I think of what the world is going to be like for the rest of my life. Your article leads me to believe that you can help me.Please help -Trent