Have You Lost the Ability to Think Deeply?

During their debates in the 1850s, Abraham Lincoln and Stephen A. Douglas took one to three hours each to give a speech. They’d then take equally long to respond to each other, with audience members sometimes listening for up to seven hours.

Compare this to the 21st century, where one of the most common entertainment forms is TikTok videos that last 35–55 seconds on average. Americans spend hours a day on social media, scrolling through endless videos, social updates, and memes.

Does it ever feel meaningless to you? Ecclesiastes 1:8 sums up our age well: “All things are full of weariness; a man cannot utter it; the eye is not satisfied with seeing, nor the ear filled with hearing.” We’re consuming content that goes half an inch deep and continues on a never-ending cycle. We’ve lost the ability to concentrate on reading the Bible for more than a few minutes without checking our phones. We’ve forgotten the art of conversing about deep topics. We can’t focus on a sermon without our minds wandering.

While entertainment isn’t sinful, we need to ask ourselves if it’s affecting our spiritual growth. Jesus commands us in Mark 12:30, “Love the Lord your God . . . with all your mind”—our minds are connected to our affections. When we limit mindless entertainment and replace it with deeper content and conversations, our relationship with God and others will benefit.

Grow in Deep Thinking

In 12 Ways Your Phone Is Changing You, Tony Reinke writes, “God has given us the power of concentration in order for us to see and avoid what is false, fake, and transient—so that we may gaze directly at what is true, stable, and eternal.” As our ability to concentrate is eroded by cheap entertainment, so too is our ability to discern truth and focus on what has eternal value. We’re wasting God’s precious gift.

We need to ask ourselves if entertainment is affecting our spiritual growth.

The goal of growing deeper in our thinking isn’t to flaunt our knowledge or win arguments. Rather, as Jonathan Edwards said, we should “seek it for the benefit of [our] souls.” Our souls are strengthened when we think deeply about the things of God.

But if we struggle to think deeply about anything, how might we grow our skills?

Grow in Discipline

You may feel stuck in the digital trap of entertainment where tech companies vie for your attention. You know this consumption of mental junk food isn’t good for you, but you keep giving in, like a hand going back for one more potato chip.

Our souls are strengthened when we think deeply about the things of God.

A few years ago, I was spending too much time on entertainment and not enough on deeper thinking, so I started making small changes. They weren’t radical, but they cultivated more disciplined thinking. Some of these came after reading Cal Newport’s Digital Minimalism, which I recommend if you want a deeper dive.

We may have gradually and unintentionally adopted our culture’s entertainment habits, but we can purposefully create our own culture of discipline and deep thinking. Proverbs 1:5 implores us, “Let the wise hear and increase in learning, and the one who understands obtain guidance.”

Our society desperately needs more people who can think wisely, discern clearly, and guide the next generation in God’s truth. It sounds like a big task, but it can start with something as small as turning off the TV and picking up a good book.

Editors’ note: 

Read more about living wisely in a digital world in Scrolling Ourselves to Death: Reclaiming Life in a Digital Age edited by Ivan Mesa and Brett McCracken (TGC/Crossway, April 2025).

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