Technology and Morality
Posted by Wade on March 11th, 2006I will not tell a lie. This is a reprint of an essay from my blog. The reason I did this is because I think it puts into question the very idea of writing on the Internet. We must decide if we are using what we have productively or need to find a better way.
I was listening to a Sunday School lesson and a comment by the teacher made me pause. He said, to paraphrase, technology is not good or evil only by how it is used. This isn’t the first time the statement has been made. For example:
In contrast, as we look at the media today from any vantage point, I think we would have to say that Lucifer’s influence is far more prevalent than the Lord’s. We are in a war. This war is the same war that raged in the premortal world. Lucifer and his followers are committed to an evil direction. . .
. . . As we consider the importance of nourishing our intellects with the promising potential of superhighway resources, we must be ever cautious about our choices of programs and the impact of media upon our lives. Those who understand our Heavenly Father’s eternal plan for the joy and happiness of His children will be better prepared to not only make good choices but also provide good choices as the information superhighway rolls across the world. The computer, television, satellite, microchip, and even the telephone all can bless and enhance our lives, or can make them miserable.
- M. Russell Ballard, “Filling the World with Goodness and Truth,†Ensign, July 1996, 10
There is little question that technology has its advantages. The New Testament is full of Paul complaining of his inability to teach to various congregations because of the time it took for words or persons to travel. Today a modern Apostle can be heard almost instantaneously or travel to the far reaches of the world in only days. Problem areas are easily accessable and organization a simple click on the keyboard. Through the marvel of television and satallites the words of Apostles and Prophets cannot be mistaken. Faces can become as familiar as if they had visited in person.
Despite all that, one must look at technology with the criterion of “use” to see if it is more good or evil. My conclusion is that technology is mostly evil. Television, radio, and the Internet are largely filled with pornography, hatred, violence, and “satanic” ideology. Most other inventions have complicated our lives at the same time it has made them easier - as recent disasters have proven such complete lack of survival skills without vast amounts of outside help. Even though we now have controlled or eradicated ancient deseases or physical problems, weapons have become deadlier to the point of easily destroying humanity off the face of the Earth. Technology has even created greater gaps between the rich and the poor, with more toys available and less things the poor can do without.
One possible solution is to seriously limit the amount of radio, television, and Internet within our lives. Become more aquanted with making things by hand and interacting face to face as friends and neighbors. Humanity has become a vast network, but not a commmunity. Often Mormons are mistaken for Amish who reject most modern inventions. Perhaps that isn’t a bad group to be associated. It is time for Latter-day Saints to become less willing to take technology for granted. We are too lazy with important things, too busy with superficial things, and too distracted from spritual things. Indications are that both our physical and spiritual health is at risk.
I would recommend reading Find Your Own Grove, although I disagree with its conclusions. The problem is not our inability to interact with nature, but to find silence that is important to contemplation. Too many voices are shouting for our attention and we allow them too much space. Lets share some ideas how to declutter the techno-jungle and pop-culture pandering.






It seems to me that in todays world people can more-or-less get watever they want, particularly in entertainment. Many are entertaining themselves to death.
I have personally cut way back on television and music. These two things had been large parts of my life, now they are rare. My time on the blog world is basically replacing time that may have been spent watching TV or listening to rock music. We will see if that was a good trade.
There very well may be better ways to spend time yet.
Comment # 1 left by Eric on March 11th, 2006
I was reading Finding My Religion: Meeting the New Monastics and wondered if this is similar to what I had in mind. I found the following to be most interesting:
Think about suburban culture — people live on a cul-de-sac, get in their cars and drive to work. They drive somewhere else to go to church. Then they get in their cars again to visit a friend in another town.
People’s lives are all over the place. They’re torn in so many directions. And they’re driven by the market economy and by advertising, which encourages them to identify themselves by what they buy, by their choices in the marketplace.
It’s no wonder people can’t find much meaning in their lives. They are longing for a deeper sense of what life’s all about. I think that’s a longing for all the little pieces of life to somehow be put together as a whole.
I think its a wonderful way of looking at what I was saying. The way they are going about it even seems related to what President Benson once said, getting the geto out of the people and not just the people out of the geto. Since Mormons are considered a “monastic-like” people, maybe we should live that kind of life more fully. After all, what they are trying to do (read the whole article) is basically what Mormons are supposed to be doing with Home and Visiting Teaching. Ultimately, what the are trying to do is what Mormonism in its truest and earliest form is about.
Comment # 2 left by Jettboy on March 13th, 2006