Skip to main content

Is your Sense of Identity Tied to your Smartphone?

In her book Alone Together Sherry Turkle writes, “To make more time would mean turning off our phones. But this is not a simple proposition since our devices are ever more closely coupled to our sense of our bodies and minds. They provide a social and psychological GPS, a navigation system for our tethered selves” (167).

Hmm, that’s a profound point. Our phones are no longer just a tool we use to get things done; they have become part of who we are. They make us feel awake, alive, and connected to the world, and therefore we must have our phones with us at all times.

But why is this so? Or to ask a question that gets closer to the heart of my issues with my phone, Why do we feel the compulsion to check and respond to messages multiple times per hour? Perhaps…
  • We want to feel important, bigger than we are.
  • We want to feel needed, even indispensable.
  • We fear the disappointment, disapproval, or anger of others if we do not respond in a certain period of time.
  • We feel irresponsible if we do not check for serious issues or emergencies, and promptly respond to the same.
  • We are not content in God, and so being ceaselessly engaged and available has become integral to our sense of purpose and meaning in life.

Indeed, smart phones have become more than tools. They’ve become enmeshed with our sense of self, and we are complicit in this enmeshment. So what are we to do? I have three simple answers that I’m trying to integrate into my way of life.

(1) Put God first, and seek contentment in him above all things. As our souls are satisfied in him, other things have less and less of a pull.

(2) Turn your phone off at night and charge it in a room other than your bedroom. This has helped me tremendously since it encourages me to grab my Bible and journal first thing in the morning rather than my phone. The principle is this: “God before gadgets,” and keeping my phone off and in another room helps me to honor this principle.

(3) Designate times to check and respond to messages. I have growing to do in this respect, but I’m shooting for three times per day: mid-morning, mid-afternoon, and mid-evening.

Like Sherry Turkle, I am not anti-tech, but I’m concerned about what our relationship to gadgets is doing to us. I’m concerned about how it’s affecting our love for God, our care for self, and our love for others. The way to address the potential dangers that are here is not necessarily to get rid of our gadgets, though for some that may be necessary. Rather, it’s to reflect on the nature of our particular issues, to acknowledge that we are complicit in them, and to take control of our gadgets rather than allowing them to control us.

May the Lord help us as we reflect, plan, and act.


Comments

  1. Hello Pastor Charlie Handren. So good to know you through your profile on the blogger and the blog post. I am so blossed to stop by your blog post and read the content of it which is so true and the question you have throgh the title of the post speaks a lot and your post is a warning for those whose identity is tied up with smart phones. Well I am also in the Pastoral ministry for last 35yrs in the great city of Mumbai a city with great contrast where richest of rich and the poroest of poor live. We reach out to the poorest of poor with the love of Christ to bring healing to the broken hearted. We also encourage young people and the adults from the West to come to Mumbai during their vacation time to work with us. We would love to have young and the adults from your church to come to Mumbai during their vacation time. I am sure theywill have a life changing experience. My email id is: dhwankhede(at)gmail(dot)com and my name is Diwakar Wankhede. Looking forward to hear from you verysoon. God's richest blessing on you, yourfamily and the ministry.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hello Pastor Charlie Handren. So good to know you through your profile on the blogger and the blog post. I am so blossed to stop by your blog post and read the content of it which is so true and the question you have throgh the title of the post speaks a lot and your post is a warning for those whose identity is tied up with smart phones. Well I am also in the Pastoral ministry for last 35yrs in the great city of Mumbai a city with great contrast where richest of rich and the poroest of poor live. We reach out to the poorest of poor with the love of Christ to bring healing to the broken hearted. We also encourage young people and the adults from the West to come to Mumbai during their vacation time to work with us. We would love to have young and the adults from your church to come to Mumbai during their vacation time. I am sure theywill have a life changing experience. My email id is: dhwankhede(at)gmail(dot)com and my name is Diwakar Wankhede. Looking forward to hear from you verysoon. God's richest blessing on you, yourfamily and the ministry.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

To Have My Soul Happy in the Lord, by George Muller

To Have My Soul Happy in the Lord By George Muller “It has pleased the Lord to teach me a truth, the benefit of which I have not lost for more than fourteen years. The point is this: I saw more clearly than ever that the first great and primary business to which I ought to attend every day was to have my soul happy in the Lord. The first thing to be concerned about was not how much I might serve the Lord, or how I might glorify the Lord, but how I might get my soul into a happy state, and how my inner man might be nourished. “I saw that the most important thing I had to do was to give myself to the reading of the Word of God—not prayer, but the Word of God. And here again, not the simple reading of the Word of God so that it only passes through my mind just as water runs through a pipe, but considering what I read, pondering over it, and applying it to my heart. To meditate on it, that thus my heart might be comforted, encouraged, warned, reproved, instructed. And that thus,...

Worship Songs, October 15, 2017

We post these worship songs leading up to the worship service so that parents may listen to them in the house or in the car within the days leading up to the worship service. Our hope is that children will hear the songs prior to and it will prepare them to participate in worship on Sunday mornings. My Redeemers Love Hope Has Come I Will Glory In My Redeemer Blessed Be Your Name Here In Your Presence Your Glory Be Still My Soul (In You I Rest) -- Sermon Text: John 11:1-16 That the next generation will set their hope in God and not forget the works of God (Psalm 78:7).

Meditations on the Glory of Christ: He Sits at the Right Hand of God

In Hebrews 1:2-4, the author makes seven claims about Jesus that when taken together greatly exalt his glory. The seventh claim the author makes about the Son is that, having made purification for sins, he now sits at the right hand of the Majesty on high. The words “he sat down” set the stage for chapter 7 where we’re taught that Jesus is both Priest and King. Prior to Jesus, no king offered his own sacrifices and no priest sat on the throne of David, for that wouldn’t be right. God had decreed that there should be a separation of powers between the priest and the king, but Jesus, unlike all before him, is worthy and able to fulfill both roles. So, on the one hand, Jesus sat down at the right hand of God after making purification for sins because the sacrifice he offered, namely himself, is sufficient. Other priests were always standing, as we see in chapter 10:11-14, because their work was never done. The blood of bulls and goats can never take away sins, so the priests could...