Ask the Thoughtful Pastor: how did we let social media take over our minds?

Ask the Thoughtful Pastor: how did we let social media take over our minds? September 27, 2016

opening a bookA couple of years ago, I read Nicholas Carr’s superb work, The Shallows: What the Internet Is Doing to Our Brains. He lays it out clearly: in many ways, we are all becoming addicted to distraction.

I remember when I read the book how difficult it was for me to stay focused even as I was reading about how the unabated use of the Internet was making it nearly impossible for people to read books from beginning to end.

None of us can stay focused. It took constant self-checking to persevere with that book. I became more troubled by each well-researched page on how this electronic world is indeed mangling our brains.

Why? What’s the draw? Personally, I think it is one more way to keep us from having to confront and carefully examine our own lives. By staying in a state of consistent distraction, we move further from the kind of honest self-reflection that is mandated for people to reach real maturity.

We’ve traded information for wisdom and in doing so, we’ve made a deal with the devil.

As for our spiritual lives . . . the act of worship, of intentionally focusing of God, not our own petty little selves, mandates a move to inner quietness. Much traditional worship is slow, full of spaces, generally devoid of immediate gratification, demanding discipline of body and mind.

Some churches have tried to accommodate the Internet-shallowed mind with mind-numbing loud music and never ending graphics flashing across multiple screens. It may be comfortable, familiar, and non-demanding, but this will not develop the soul.

The Real Problem: Laziness in Brain and Body

But we let it happen because we humans are, at our core, essentially lazy, both in mind and body. These constant distractions feed laziness while giving the illusion that we are engaged and doing something useful.

In truth, the never-ending stream of words, videos and images provides a wall of protection to keep us from having to encounter life in its rawness. All reality becomes mediated by the screen, giving an illusion of safe barriers.

It is yet one more drug to enter into our brains, taking us captive, unprotesting, into the abyss of constant information, curated to feed our particular prejudices. Ultimately, we become less human, less able to listen, learn, and grow.

Why? I’ll say it again: we are, at our core, lazy. That may be the ultimate sin that needs to be addressed.


ask-the-thoughtful-pastor[Note: a version of this column is scheduled to run in the Sept 30, 2016, edition of the Denton Record Chronicle. The Thoughtful Pastor, AKA Christy Thomas, welcomes all questions for the column. Although the questioner will not be identified, I do need a name and verifiable contact information in case the newspaper editor has need of it. Please email questions to: thoughtfulpastor@gmail.com.]


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