Why TheDigital Fast?

In a world increasingly dominated by screens, notifications, and endless digital noise, it’s easy to lose sight of what matters most. As Christians, we are called to live intentionally, focusing on God and cultivating meaningful relationships with others. However, technology often pulls us in the opposite direction—distracting us, consuming our time, and disrupting our ability to connect with God and those around us.

A digital fast offers a powerful opportunity to step back, reimagine our relationship with technology, and examine how it impacts our spiritual lives. By eliminating distractions, we create space for deeper reflection, prayer, and genuine connection with the people and purpose God has placed in our lives. This practice is not about rejecting technology altogether but learning to use it in a way that glorifies God and aligns with His priorities. Let this fast be a time to reset, refocus, and rediscover what it means to live a life free from unnecessary distractions.

What is The Digital Fast?

Ready to shake up your relationship with technology? Join us for The Digital Fast – a 28-day adventure that’ll help us take a fresh look at how we use our devices. We’ll walk through four phases together: Detach, Discover, Delight, and Determine. Everyone gets their own Digital Fast workbook, but the real magic happens as we do this as a whole church. This journey might just transform the way you think about your phone (and trust us, that’s a good thing!). The best part? As we learn to spend less time scrolling and more time being present, we’ll find ourselves growing closer to each other and to God.

4 Weeks toRedesign Our Relationshipwith Technology

Detach

Week 1

The first week focuses on detaching from distractions, resentment, and discouragement to connect with the Father, find real rest, and experience gratitude, joy, peace, and hope.

Discover

Week 2

During the second week, you’ll discover how to remove and replace idols of the heart, how connecting to the Spirit frees and guides you, and the wonders of worship through praise and thanksgiving.

Delight

Week 3

Your third week of The Digital Fast will focus on delighting in the God that formed you, in the gift of life through beauty, play and laughter, and finally in remembering God’s faithfulness and hope for the future.

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Determine

Week 4

To wrap up, week four will help you determine how to bear good fruit, abide in and with Jesus, and live for wholeness through loving God and your neighbors. Finally, determining your ongoing relationship with technology.

The Digital Fast will begin Monday, March 17

Essential Tools

Digital Fast Workbook

We encourage you to purchase The Digital Fast Workbook from one of our campus lobbies. This workbook will guide you through the 28 days with devotions, exercises, and experiences to help you reconnect to what matters most in life…God and others.
The cost for the book is $5.

Aro App

In addition, our church will be using the Aro app (yes an app) to quantify how much time collectively that we are intentionally spending OFF our phones each week.

Addicted?

Don’t think you’re addicted to your phone? Take the assessment and see if you’re addicted to your device!

Beyond Sunday at Bethlehem Church

A podcast created to go beyond the Sunday service experience at Bethlehem Church, exploring some of the deeper questions of our faith and offering additional content from behind the scenes.

Check back here for daily podcasts aimed at encouraging you throughout the Digital Fast, beginning Monday, March 17th.

Next Gen Resources

Dinner Conversation Starters

Screen Free Challenge Calendar

Weekly Devotionals (Ages 11-14)

Additional Resources

The Anxious Generation

Jonathan Haidt

The Tech-Wise Family

Andy Crouch

Who Are You Following?

Sadie Robertson Huff

SOS! The Technology Guidebook

Sheryl Gould

Frequently Asked Questions

What Should I Expect
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The practice of fasting (of any kind) is in stark contrast to most of the ways we live on a day-to-day basis in our lives, especially as it relates to digital technology. Due to the addictive nature of technology, and specifically smartphones, we want you to be aware of what you may experience during this time.

In terms of withdrawal effects, you may experience nervousness, restlessness, or irritability during the first several days. You may have heightened emotional sensitivity and realize deep feelings of anger, grief, or sadness, even if you’re initially unsure of the cause. Often, our engagement with technology disguises unpleasant feelings and leads us to avoid coping with them.

However, the benefits you can expect far outweigh the initial drawbacks. As with any fast, the further you progress, the more distinctly you may be aware of the leading of the Holy Spirit and a realization of the nearness of God and His work in your heart and life. Additionally, people report better sleep almost immediately. Other benefits include better posture, noticing the faces and eyes of others, increased mental clarity, the ability to focus intentionally, easing of neck and shoulder tension, an uptick in peace, the ability to dream for the future, and a vibrancy to the physical world.

This experience is an invitation to explore a better way. Rather than asking, “Can I detox/fast for 28 days?” Instead ask, “What do I want to learn or experience in the next 28 days?” The first question will cause us to focus on simply muscling through and getting to the finish line. With this approach, there is the potential to either abandon the pursuit if we stumble along the way or make it to the end without having experienced the benefits. The second question will help us to discover what can be carried forward in our relationship to tech. If we don’t have a clear and established “why” behind this pursuit, it will be more difficult to sustain and minimal in its return.

How Do I Prepare?
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In the week leading up to the fast, we suggest letting the people in your daily life know you’re planning to engage in a digital media fast for 28 days. Here are some additional steps to consider:

  1. Purchase an alarm clock so your phone is not charging in your room or beside your bed leading to scrolling before sleeping and upon waking
  2. Purchase an analog watch to replace your smart watch.
  3. If needed, put an auto-reply on your email account that tells people your work hours and sets an expectation for when they can expect a response.
  4. Have a conversation with your work teams and supervisor about your hope to disengage from work/technology during non-working hours.
  5. Dialogue with your family about how each person is planning to participate over the next 28 days and come up with ways to support and encourage one another.
  6. Find a few people who are also fasting and establish a regular check-in rhythm and questions to ask one another regularly.
  7. Check out our resource page for recommended reading and stock up on books.
  8. Curate and update your playlists in Spotify or Apple Music so you have great soundtracks to accompany your fast.

How Do I Engage?
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As you disentangle from digital devices, consider these ways to purposefully engage in the life right in front of you:

  1. Read a novel (or a few!) that you’ve never gotten around to starting.
  2. Play old school board or card games with your family and/or other fasting friends. Everyone gets to choose a game to contribute. Create a bracket and host a gaming tournament complete with eliminations and prizes.
  3. Enroll in a cooking (or dance, or sporting, or art) class alone or with others and attend faithfully in person.
  4. Become a walker. Take advantage of living in beautiful Athens and find trails and greenways to walk while listening to those playlists you’ve curated.
  5. Pick up a hobby to do with your hands.
  6. If you have small children, get on the floor and play with them as often as possible, being fully engaged in the worlds their little minds create.
  7. Endeavor to only have meals around a table and invite others for conversation.
  8. Use the times when you’d normally reach for your phone as a prompt to pray and thank God for the world He’s given you and ask Him for the peace to be present in it.
  9. Become someone who journals. Keep track not only of how you’re feeling (even negatively) as you disentangle from media, but of all God is doing in you and in the world around you as you notice it more.
  10. Check out our resources to help you and your family engage in creative ways.

The Digital Fast, starting March 17th
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