Posted in Life

Overcoming Media Saturation: Embrace Real-Life Experiences

In a recent edition of Recomendo, a weekly newsletter I receive Sunday morning, the editors pointed me to Erik Davis’ talk How to Navigate the Weirdness. I haven’t watched the whole talk yet, but two summary statements caught my attention.

  • “Ground yourself in physical sensations and direct experiences to counterbalance the effects of media saturation and overwhelming information.”

I don’t want to be saturated with media, but it happens. One Google search to learn how to fix a problem with my 3D printer brings up self-help videos on multiple platforms laden with links to other videos and advertisements for related products. It’s like someone dumped a bucket of media on my head. I do this many times a day. I’m overwhelmed with information.

To counter this, I take the dog for a walk, I play my guitar, or I exercise. I do something physical, something that engages my senses, and immerse myself in an experience to escape a virtual world for the real one.

The second statement had a spiritual hue:

  • “Deepen your capacity to embrace uncertainty, mystery, and doubt without searching for fact or reason—not everything fits into a fixed narrative.”

There’s a lot I don’t understand about God. Even though I daily learn new things about him, I always have more questions. At the end of the day, I have to trust what he says without much corroborating evidence.

There’s nothing wrong with some uncertainty. That’s what makes games fun. You don’t know what you’ll be dealt or what number you’ll roll. I love reading mysteries. Doubt is good. It protects me from being scammed.

I love facts. As a logical thinker, I gravitate to reason. But some narratives take me in a new direction. Or, as I now like to say, “I didn’t know where I was going until I got there.”

Posted in Through the Bible Devotions

What a rush!

Photo by Devin Lyster on Unsplash

A “through the bible” devotion from 1 Samuel 10.

Suddenly, I couldn’t get the next word out. A wave of emotion washed over me and I felt overwhelmed. I had to pause, take a deep breath, collect myself, and then continue preaching.

I cannot tell you what triggered those moments. They didn’t happen often, and they always caught me off guard. I would be flooded with an awareness of God’s power and presence when I mentioned certain memories, people, or situations.

The best way to describe it: a spiritual rush.

I think that’s what happens to Saul after Samuel anoints him king of Israel. Samuel describes what’s going to happen next. He tells Saul, “You’re going to come across a group of prophets playing instruments and prophesying. The Spirit of God will rush upon you and you’ll join them” (1 Samuel 10:5,6). It all happens exactly as Samuel describes.

Suddenly, it’s real. Saul suddenly “gets religion.” There’s no denying that the Lord is at work here. Saul can’t help but join in with those praising God and proclaiming his power and presence. At the end of the day, Saul could say, “What a rush!”

These moments don’t happen very often. That kind of excitement only comes along once in a while. And you can’t manufacture it. But you can thank God for those special moments that fill you to overflowing with a rush of praise, song, tears, or laughter.