Archive for the ‘iphone’ Category

A Techno-Fast for Lent!

February 16, 2010

“Hi, my name is Bill, and I’m a technoholic.”

“Hiiii Biiiill….”
I grab my cell phone between 6 and 12 times an hour to send or receive a text, e-mail, update/check Facebook, or to micro-blog through Twitter.
I have ten pages of apps on my iPhone, from the Mass readings to the Church Fathers, CNN to Craig’s List, and games galore. I listen to music on the way to work, at school, and on occasional walks around campus. At home, Apple TV allows us to stream our music and photos over the television, and surf YouTube as well. I have taken well over 10,000 pictures since I got the iPhone nearly three years ago. I love to blog, and listen to podcasts. And I need to let it go.
A man is enslaved to whatever he cannot part with that is less than himself.
– George MacDonald
Let me say straight away that it is good. The wonders we have created by our hands… amazing! But what is the one thing necessary in this life? What is the summum bonum that the saints and mystics have pointed to and that to which the dying man reaches while lying in his bed at the end of his days? Tools of communication, or a deeper Communion?
At the end of the day, it’s all about relationships, isn’t it? And as much as these tools can help facilitate communication and convenience (trust me, I am their biggest fan) they cannot replace the warm face before me, my wife and son, the students I am privileged to guide, the person on the street, the cashier at the grocery store. Flesh and blood, immortal souls each with their own story. Fr. Benedict Groeschel once said “Forget the TV… give me a person any day. People interest me!”
I was talking to a good friend today who, coincidentally, is also fasting from technology for Lent. We’re excited about this 40 Day Dare. “It’s all about silence this Lent for me” he said.
God speaks in silence. Silence is His native tongue. The world, the stars, the flowers move in silence. I have opened myself up to too much noise. I feel myself slipping sometimes, reaching into my pocket for that phone, checking it incessantly, like the Ring…. the Precious!
“I feel like butter scraped over too much bread…. I need a holiday! I want to see mountains again, Gandalf. Mountains!”
– Bilbo Baggins, Lord of the Rings
Can you become possessed by your possessions? Can the device made to serve you become your master? The mystics say that slavery is to give yourself to anything less than God. To make anything other than God your god is to become a slave to that thing. So I’m signing off for awhile, to “front only the essential facts of life.” My plan is to drink the coffee slowly and attentively, to read Louis de Montfort, Teresa of Avila, and John of the Cross. To spend more time before the Tabernacle than a computer screen. To give time to God and family and others, not in splintered, fragmented bytes but in a whole-hearted, long and loving gaze.
So into the desert we go! Off the grid for 40 days! See you on the other side!

Lord of the Ringtones

May 29, 2009

Are we addicted to our gadgets? Have iPods become our igods? I was struck by this article on a few levels… and I’m not gonna lie, at first glance, we were nervousss, preciousss… that they wanted to take it from usss, preciousss!

The main point addressed was captured here:
So, the answer seems simple: Like the One Ring, mobile electronic devices are too powerful for mere mortals to wield without corruption. They inevitably lead to disturbance, disruption, and disaster. Or do they? … On the spiritual side, anyone can reference prayers, sacred texts (in the traditional sense), and fellowship with co-believers anytime, anywhere. (One of us spent the Jewish holiday of Purim tracking the reading of the scroll of Esther on his iPhone, complete with special noise-making software. The other enjoyed Lenten prayers using this iPhone app.)

Hmmmm… read on!

Vatican Meets iPhone

May 19, 2009

As a Catholic Nerd with an iPhone, I am very excited about what’s coming this Sunday, in honor of this year’s World Communications Day…. check it out here. If this doesn’t justify you making the switch to the world’s greatest phone / ipod / game device / calendar / internet browser / e-mail / camera / mosquito repellent (yes, there’s an app for that), than I don’t know WHAT will. Here’s the snazzy new website the Vatican has just launched.


“The site and its applications were developed by Italian Father Paolo Padrini, a diocesan priest from Tortona. He also helped develop the iBreviary application for the iPhone and the Catholic Facebook application called Praybook, which allows users to access and share with others traditional Catholic prayers and texts from the Liturgy of the Hours.”
– from the CNS article

“I would like to conclude this message by addressing myself, in particular, to young Catholic believers: to encourage them to bring the witness of their faith to the digital world.”

– Pope Benedict XVI