#102 Digitalisation: Breaking Free from Screen Addiction

By Luke Rininger

Introduction—Hope in the Midst of Distraction

 

I downloaded the game to connect with my boys. My two younger sons were playing it on their tablet and kept my requesting help. After a few days of trying to figure it out alongside them, I thought, I’ll download this on my phone so I can learn it better and show real interest in what they care about. That was my first mistake …

Within weeks, I was hooked. The game was designed so you could never win. The levels just kept getting harder; your team could always get stronger, and there was always someone with a better team than yours. My boys eventually lost interest and moved on, but I didn’t. Two months later, I was averaging seven hours of screen time a day on my phone, and that most of that was owed to playing that game.

If you’re reading this, maybe you have your own version of that story. Perhaps it’s not a game but social media addiction, streaming services, news apps, or just the compulsive habit of checking your phone every few minutes, signaling a potential phone addiction. Maybe you’ve noticed your kids—the generation of digital natives—glued to screens and realized you’re no different. It’s possible you’ve felt the nagging guilt of missing real moments because of digital distractions. Or, maybe you’re just tired, tired of the constant pull, the fragmented attention, the sense that you’re never fully present anywhere.

You’re not alone, and you’re not crazy. Screens and digital technology have become one of the most dominant forces competing for our attention in human history. The average American spends around seven hours a day on screens, and Generation Z averages around nine hours.1 The average American checked their phone 144 times each day in 2023, increasing to 205 times each day just one year later.2 We scroll before we pray. We reach for our devices before we reach for our spouse. Somehow, we’ve convinced ourselves this is just how life works now, entrenching these unhealthy digital habits.

This life skill guide isn’t here to shame you. It’s here to help you see clearly what’s happening and to offer you a way out. Screen addiction isn’t just about wasted time. It’s about a divided heart, fragmented attention, and a soul that was made for something far greater than endless scrolling.

Our devices aren’t neutral tools anymore. They’ve been engineered to capture and keep our attention. The brightest minds billions of dollars work to make it nearly impossible for us to look away, fueling our digital dependence. That said, just because something is designed to hook us doesn’t mean we have to stay hooked.

You were not made to live a distracted, fragmented life full of digital distraction. You were made to know God, love others, and steward your time and attention for His glory. Jesus said, “I came that they may have life and have it abundantly” (John 10:10). Abundant life doesn’t come from a screen. It comes from the One who created you, loves you, and calls you to something better than cheap digital dopamine.

Audio Guide

Audio Audio
album-art

00:00

#102 Digitalisation: Breaking Free from Screen Addiction

Subscribe to Our Newsletter to Get Weekly Bible & Discipleship Tips